Discussion
The Orchard of Sleepless Trees
A small village had an orchard whose trees never slept. They rustled and shifted even on windless nights. Locals believed the trees were nourished by dreams: every time someone hoped sincerely, a new blossom appeared. During a difficult winter, hope dwindled and branches grew bare. A girl climbed one tree and whispered all the dreams she was too afraid to say aloud. By morning the orchard was heavy with fruit — warm, glowing, fragrant. Villagers ate from the branches, each fruit holding a dream of its own. They realized hope never disappears; it only waits for someone brave enough to feed it again.
By GoldenSpeech5 months ago in BookClub
book review: Trail of the Lost by Andrea Lankford
There is a lot to be (positively) said about “Trail of the Lost: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail” by Andrea Lankford, which is jammed with information, readable, and tackles the tangled complexity that is searching for lost people in the wilderness. There are no neat answers because this is not a neat situation. While this can be frustrating to some, it’s reality and reality is sometimes very frustrating and uncooperative; which is well reflected in the text. If you’re interested in nature, true crime, and/or wilderness rescue, this is a good read satisfying in its thoroughness without being winded or dry. It’s not your usual true crime or hiking book which is its strength; the biggest strength being the author’s ability to not be constrained to any singular field and in the connections she makes.
By Chaia Levi5 months ago in BookClub
Is it Ethical to Use Bookstores as a Showroom?. Top Story - November 2025.
There is nothing quite like the joy of wandering around a bookstore. I love digging through the shelves and finding a hidden gem. I love the smell of the worn paper and the background noise of other customers flipping through pages.
By Kera Hollow5 months ago in BookClub
Writing Beyond the Paycheck:
In the modern digital world, creative writing is often measured by the number of views, reads, and comments, among other metrics, which can overlook the joy of writing. Most writers focused on publishing pieces on platforms like Vocals, hoping to reach readers and earn a little income. Yet, writing is something far more than money, as it is a sense of creativity, exploration, and unique thinking that cannot be monetized.
By Wathsala Rathnayaka5 months ago in BookClub
The two books that helped me develop my spiritual side
My spiritual experience started in Seaside, Oregon, in October 2023. I walked into Beach Books. Extremely hungover, reconsidering my life as I walked around the store. Now I am sober, with this trip being the start of the turning point for me. Two books called to me that put me on my spiritual path. The first one, Shadow Magic: Unlocking the Whole Witch Within, by Nikki Van De Car. It had beautiful art that I couldn’t stop looking at. Then I saw one that strongly spoke to me, even though it had a plain cover. Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon’s Journey into the Afterlife by Eben Alexander, M.D. Both of these books launched my growth.
By Kristine Franklin5 months ago in BookClub
Robert Downey Jr was once arrested after he was caught driving naked in his Porsche with cocaine, heroin, and a .357 magnum.
Robert Downey Jr.'s Infamous 2001 Arrest: The Porsche, Cocaine, and .357 Magnum Scandal Imagine a Hollywood star zooming down a dark road, naked behind the wheel of a sleek Porsche. That's the scene police faced in 2001 when they pulled over Robert Downey Jr. This arrest shocked fans and marked a deep low in his battle with addiction. It wasn't just drugs or a gun—it was a mix that screamed chaos.
By Story silver book 5 months ago in BookClub
AI Isn’t Coming for Your Job — It’s Coming for Your Speed
Introduction The Fear That Started It All Every few years, the world meets a new “threat” that’s supposedly going to take everyone’s jobs. It was automation in factories. Then it was computers. Then the internet. Now, it’s Artificial Intelligence.
By Keli Chris5 months ago in BookClub
From Skyscrapers to Open Fields:
In Contemporary years, a significant discourse has emerged that city inhabitants are moving outwards to smaller towns and suburbs. The underlying causes of this shift are housing affordability, Income stability, personal preference, and remote work. Urban centers have faced extensive challenges, including housing shortages, development pressure, and their impact on climate change.
By Wathsala Rathnayaka5 months ago in BookClub
Monk Mode
Winning at anything worth winning requires focus. Real, monastic focus. Not the flaky, half-hearted effort people call productivity tricks. I am talking about a deliberate period of immersion where you eliminate distractions, optimize your environment, and build a repeatable protocol that turns deep work into a habit. Call it monk mode. Call it monk mode protocol. Whatever you call it, the results are the same: consistent momentum, fewer decision leaks, and serious output.
By Keli Chris5 months ago in BookClub











