
Annie Kapur
Bio
I am:
🙋🏽♀️ Annie
📚 Avid Reader
📝 Reviewer and Commentator
🎓 Post-Grad Millennial (M.A)
***
I have:
📖 280K+ reads on Vocal
🫶🏼 Love for reading & research
🦋/X @AnnieWithBooks
***
🏡 UK
Stories (2919)
Filter by community
Heart of a Dog by Mikhail Bulgakov
Mikhail Bulgakov’s novella Heart of a Dog (Собачье сердце) was first written in 1925, though it was not officially published in the Soviet Union until 1987, several decades after Bulgakov's death. The work was written during a time of intense political and cultural terror in the Soviet Union, following the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the subsequent rise of Stalin's regime. The novella represents Bulgakov’s true feelings about the Soviet machine, especially in its attitudes toward social engineering, the intelligentsia, and the flawed implementation of Marxism.
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Sister Carrie" by Theodore Dreiser
Theodor Dreiser is not someone I have explored many times, one or two perhaps and my writings on his book An American Tragedy was well-received. Since then, I have made it my business to read and reread more of his novels, including the often overlooked Sister Carrie. Once I started reading this book I absolutely could not stop. An enthralling story which often shocked me as it was written in a time where perhaps these stories of nonconforming women were still not taken seriously, it is a fantastic narrative even if the main character's morals are shifty at best. Carrie is definitely one of those characters we look forward to learning more about as she experiences more of the world. But, that doesn't mean we like her...
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Nobody's Girl" by Virginia Roberts Giuffre
Content Warning: The following review discusses topics of child abuse, rape, drug/alcohol addiction, human trafficking and suicide. Take these into account when considering if and when you will read the review. Continue with caution if you hold any sensitivity to the topics mentioned.
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "How to Change Your Mind" by Michael Pollan . Top Story - November 2025.
I had the entirely wrong idea about this book. I was reading on my phone when I finished the last book and wanted to start a new one. Thus, I quickly bought this on the cheap and started reading. I thought it was going to be about changing your mind, like actually changing it by using therapy techniques and the like. It's about LSD and psychedelics. But it's also about depression, anxiety, dying, terror, mythologies of humanity etc. Interesting and actually pretty well-written - I have absolutely no regrets of not reading the blurb when it came to this book even though I don't particularly agree with everything within. Let's take a look at what it is about then...
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Oleander, Jacaranda" by Penelope Lively
“When you do not know what to expect of the world—when everything is astonishing— then anything is possible and acceptable. Children are aliens in a landscape that is entirely unpredictable; they are required to conform to the dictation of a mysterious code while finding their way around a world which is both dazzling and perverse. I wanted to see if it was possible to uncover something of this experience”. - "Oleander, Jacaranda" by Penelope Lively
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning" by Laurie Lee
Cider with Rosie I admit, did not move me too much - though I have to admit it was good. But when it comes to sequels I have to say that As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning is probably one of the better examples of one. It is a testament to travel and self-discovery and of course, I read books like this because I hate travelling and self-discovery is something of a side-note for me. I prefer to read about other people who take trips to find themselves philosophically, however unbelievable I think it would be to actually do in real life unless you ran into something like a war-zone and saw someone die (see: Orlando). Let's take a look at what makes this book extra special...
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Scotland Yard: A Bloody History" by Simon Read
How do I explain this? I was bored and got a book on my phone again! This book, entitled Scotland Yard: A Bloody History, gives us a history of one of the most famed institutions in Britain in various crimes that are gruesome to say the least. But, from ignoring a letter concerning how to do fingerprinting some decades before fingerprinting would be a method to solving crimes all the way to crimes that were probably on par of that of Jack the Ripper in terms of horror - this book holds no punches. It gives us a fun, intriguing and yet, informative narrative about the birth of a police system which not only has its successes but also its drawbacks.
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Three Lives by Gertrude Stein
Gertrude Stein’s Three Lives was published in 1909 by the Sunwise Turn publishing house. The novel was Stein’s first major work of prose fiction and represents a move away from traditional narrative structures of the past American literary landscape. Before writing Three Lives, the author had lived in Paris, where she was influenced by Cubism, post-impressionist art, and avant-garde movements. The book reflects her involvement with these movements, mostly through her use of language and form, both of which were quite radical for the time and place in which she lived.
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "The Knot of Vipers" by François Mauriac
I'm not going to lie, more than often it is a title that draws me to a book and this one was quite intriguing because it didn't give anything away. The only thing I could figure out is that it wasn't going to be a romantic comedy or something along those lines. The Knot of Vipers is François Mauriac's novel written in the style of a confession, about a family falling apart and the members like 'vipers'. They deceive, they are poison to each other, they are hypocritical and selfish. All I can say is that this psychologically twisted novel was not quite what I was expecting but it was amazing nevertheless.
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Ageless" by Andrew Steele
Who loves cheap books they can read on their phone? I do. This book wasn't too expensive when I found it and well, I'm not going to lie when I say I'm not overtly interested in biology. HOWEVER, I am also aware that this book is an important read and so, I wanted to get in there. What happens when we have to confront ageing and all of the horrors that come with it? Well, if you're like me you normally turn to the fact that you don't feel like you're too old but you also have to admit that there are things you simply can't do anymore - things you used to do about ten or fifteen years' ago. Andrew Steele gets into the argument about why we should treat this concept, where our bodies work against us, rather than just looking at diseases we can see straight away. How do we cure ageing? Oh, and why should we?
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Auschwitz: A Doctor's Eyewitness Account" by Miklós Nyiszli
There's something really upsetting, something really emotional, about reading books regarding the experiences of those at the concentration camps during the Second World War. But this book is something else entirely. Miklós Nyiszli writes with such incredible amounts of this sadness, this incredibly dark emotion that we cannot help to be drawn into the book, no matter how disgusting and horrifying the subject matter. The man worked for and with the infamous Dr Mengele and was subjected to some gruesome sights. The even more horrific thing though was that the prisoners of the camp were obviously looking at him, recognising him and knowing that he too, was Jewish.
By Annie Kapur3 months ago in Geeks












