TJ Klune - Tumblr Posts
Ox's thoughts when he meets 10-year-old Joe Bennett:

Ox's thoughts when 17-year-old Joe Bennett finds out Ox finds him attractive:


The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune 🌻 I am smitten with this book
Has anyone ever thought of wolfsong being made into an animated visual adaptation? I think it would fuck so hard




Green Creek by T. J. Klune
Cover arts for the French Special edition of the serie Édition Bookmarks October 2023

Stone Wolf Emoji Kitchen for all my Green Creek packmates
this is so beautiful I'm going to pass out

The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune 🌻 I am smitten with this book
I am normal about this
Waiting like a typical human being right now

guys
La indudable asombrosidad (está palabra existe?) de T. J. Klune.
Despues de leer Green Creek, The house in the cerulean sea, Under the whispering door y Tales of Verania, he llegado a la conclusión de que no puede ser legal el nivel de talento que tiene Travis John Klune.
OH MY GOD I JUST RE-READ THE HOUSE ON THE CERULEAN SEA AND HAD A REVELATION
Linus Baker is the literal definition of " I lost focus and had a consensual workplace relationship"
Cannot believe that Linus Baker is a " babe , babe look at me. This isn't you" kind of boyfriend
I had the pleasure of zooming with the author TJ Klune who writes queer books (most notable The House in the Cerulean Sea), he said that he had started his writing career writing fanfics. Just more proof that it is a valid point of writing and everyone needs to start somewhere. Even if you don’t go anywhere big with writing, you are still a writer because you write beautiful words that you put effort into. ❤️
Psst hey!! Over here!
Fic writers and original story writers are the same!
Writing fanfics doesn't make you any less of a writer!
Yall are just gatekeepers. Stop being assholes. There's room for everyone!
I would like to lodge a formal complaint to one T.J. Klune. You’re book is causing me immense emotional distress and I would like compensation ☹️
I'm still so upset that I have to wait until August to get Brothersong just because I'm stubborn and want to get the hardcover rather than the paperback
Finished The House in The Cerulean Sea today and I now have a new favorite book.
We need more of The House in the Cerulean Sea content!!!!!
House in the Cerulean Sea head cannons:
Phee- Loves singing, will sing lullabies to the other kids if they bother her enough.
Lucy- Sneaks into David's room to have midnight feasts sometimes (Talia found out and was very annoyed that she wasn't invited)
Chauncy- Pretends to be a pirate. Idk why, he just does.
Hi! Does anyone have any Book recommendations for someone who just finished The House ln The Cerulean Sea and is super sad because it‘s over? (It’s me. I’m someone.) I‘m talking Found Family, Magic and that feeling of being wrapped in a big blanket. Bonus Points if it‘s Queer!
Thanks!🥰
Is anyone else deeply afraid, that if a House in the Cerulean Sea Movie ever gets made, Hollywoods first Impulse will probably be to cast James Cordon as Linus? Because I am.
~ November's Books Reviewed ~
Red, White and Royal Blue by Casey McQuinston
(418 pages)
I had wanted to read this book for AGES and I'd say it definitely lived up to my expectations - every shitty christmas romcom! And I mean that both in a bad way, and a very very good way. I unapologetically loved every second of it.
I gave this book 4 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
A Fateful Crossing by Tom Hindle
(449 pages)
Not bad, but also, not good. A little messy and therefore a bit confusing, especially as a murder mystery, messy plot holes etc can really detract from the story in my opinion. That being said, I read it quickly and it was an easy and enjoyable enough story for that to happen.
I gave this book 3 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Babel by R. F. Kuang
(546 pages)
Really interesting concept. I think I maybe read it a little too quickly so didn't fully appreciate it as it should have been. The commentary and insights on society and racism and xenophobia was very well done and extremely engaging which is what's going to make me say (unusually for me) that the fantasy elements were the worst bits of this book for me, and I almost felt that the same story could have been told without the "magic" and it maybe would have been even more impactful to just be commenting on language and communication in a reality that is more obviously similar to our own.
I gave this book 4 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Murder Game by Tom Hindle
(373 pages)
Better than the other Hindle book I read in my opinion, but still a little too "convenient" almost to be a fully successful and good murder mystery for me. Still obviously an easy and light read though, otherwise I wouldn't have picked it up after the first one.
I gave this book 3 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Where are the Women by Sara Sheridan
(447 pages)
I was gifted this book and it is therefore an obvious movement away from the normal sorts of books I choose to read (it is designed more similarly to a guide book or history text book). In theory, this book is extremely interesting and so so undeniably well researched. I definitely learnt a lot. However, there is a reason I don't tend to read non fiction (or fictions books like this designed to be like a guide book), and that is because I don't particularly like reading them - they always feel just like an info dump with a lack of an actual story arc to me (which I suppose is exactly what they're aiming for...)
I gave this book 3 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Secret History by Donna Tart
(559 pages)
It is clever. And I'm always going to appreciate a book that is the first of its genre or does something new for the first time. That being said, just because somethings the first, rarely means it's the best, and I've definitely read other dark academia style books that I've enjoyed more to be honest. I found myself skim reading sections which speaks to the fact that I perhaps didn't find it as engaging as other books.
I gave this book 3.5 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️🌗
Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus
(386 pages)
I was waring going in to this book since it has blown up, but mostly with people a little older than myself (late 30s-early 50s as far as I've seen), but I really really enjoyed this (and have now recommended it to all my reading friends my age too!)! It filled me with a righteous anger, but in a very validating way. Bits were a little predictable, but that hardly mattered when the social commentary was so much more important than the plot. I'd support a rule saying that every cis male should have to read this to be honest, it's such a peak behind the curtain at just the unintentional, but so deeply engrained micro aggressions that all us women experience, nevermind the outright moments of sexism and misogyny.
I gave this book 5 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Almond by Won Pyung Sohn
(252 pages)
A bit of a non story, but I strangely enjoyed it. I read the entire thing in less than an hour so hardly an intense read, but it was a very interesting perspective and commentary on people and their relationships with each other, and with themselves.
I gave this book 3.5 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The House in the Cerulean Sea by T. J. Klune
(398 pages)
Everything I wanted and/or needed. So wholesome. My only complaint actually is that I wanted more to be honest. All the characters are so so lovely and I loved their found family. T. J. Klune rarely disappoints.
I gave this book 5 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
AAAAAA THIS IS SO CUTE

The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune 🌻 I am smitten with this book