Sailor Moon Book Tag!

 This tag was originally created by Alexa Loves Books on YouTube. The original video can be watched here

I tagged some people over on Instagram. But anyone is free to do this tag!

I do not own Sailor Moon. It is owned by Naoko Takeuchi.  

1. Sailor Moon: A book that makes you hungry. 

Several! I am a huge foodie so I read a lot of books centered around food. Two that come to mind are A Banh Mi for Two by Trinity Nguyen and The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich by Deya Muniz. 

2. Sailor Mercury: A book that features science and technology.

Two that come to mind are both by Margaret Peterson Haddix: Double Identity and Turnabout

3. Sailor Venus: A book that makes you want to play video games.

Bye Forever I Guess by Jodi Meadows.  

4. Sailor Mars: A book inspired by mythology and folklore.

Where the Mountain Meets the Moon by Grace Lin.

5. Sailor Jupiter: A book that gives you strong feelings

I got several, but a recent one would have to be the Morisaki Bookshop duology by Satoshi Yagasawa.  

6. Sailor Saturn: A post-apocalyptic book you love.

The entire Wayfarers series by Becky Chambers! 

7. Sailor Pluto: A time-travel book

Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh by Rachael Lippincott 

8. Sailor Uranus: A book featuring elemental magic

The In the Name of the Mermaid Princess manga series.  

9. Sailor Neptune: a book featuring music

A French Girl in New York by Anna Adams.  

10. Tuxedo Mask: A book with masquerades or hidden identities

PS I Like You by Kasie West

11. Sailor Chibi Moon: A favorite middle grade book

How about an author who writes middle grade? I love all of Robert Beatty's books so far (well, except for the fourth Serafina book, which I gave 3.5 stars to...) 

12. Luna, Artemis, and Diana: A book for animal lovers  

I got several! Two that come to mind are Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo and We'll Prescribe You a Cat by Syou Ishida. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Wanderer Review

If It Makes You Happy Review

Alice in Kyoto Forest Volume 1 Review