7.31.2024

3 products that kept me glowing for summer 2024

Since today is the last day of July, it seemed like the perfect time to recap the products that kept me glowing for summer 2024 - 3 products that I will keep on using as we enter the magical fall season! Try one, try all...I guarantee that you will love them because they are life-changing. Trust.


HELLO SUNDAY The One For Your Lips SPF 50 Hydrating Lip Balm with Hyaluronic Acid & Squalane {$12.00}
The temps were triple digits more often than not in my neck of the woods, and this stuff protected my lips like whoa! - we're talking zero burns and no chapping at all whatsoever. Def my new bestie {especially for beach days}!


e.l.f. Cosmetics Bronzing Drops in ROSE GOLD {$12.00}
I absolutely did not know how much glow these Bronzing Drops would add to my skin, but I was amazed that I didn't need to wear foundation whenever I used them {which is basically every day}. I run very fair, so I use the shade Rose Gold {there are 2 darker shades}, and it is perfect for giving me a natural sunkiss. Add it to your moisturizer then apply all over face. Chef's kiss.


rhode pocket blush in SLEEPY GIRL {$24.00}
I own this blush in 3 shades, but summer 2024 was all about the soft mauve known as Sleepy Girl. The formula on these cream blushes is phenomenal - it literally melts into your skin; and this shade, in particular, is literal chef's kiss. It adds a super natural, rich bronze tone to skin that makes you look subtly sunkissed. Who doesn't love that?


What products kept you glowing for summer 2024?


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xx

Disclaimer: Cat Eyes & Skinny Jeans occasionally receives vendor/ brand sponsorships for mentioning their products and services.
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1.18.2024

decorate my amazon kindle paperwhite signature edition with me!



Decorate my Amazon Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition with me!🩷 I’ve been obsessed with this #Bookstagram trend, but not until I found this CoBak Case (which has a protective cover AND clear back to collage) did I finally try it out - and I love! Linking everything I used (including these cutie Taylor Swift stickers)!


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xx
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1.02.2024

january is january

people put so much stress and anxiety into the concept of january, but here’s the sitch: january is january. you’re still going to feel feelings once the clock strikes midnight. you’re still going to cry; you’re still going to laugh; you’re still going to hope; you’re still going to dream. it’s all just going to occur in another year. 2023 is out, 2024 is in; but it’s still just january, and everything is going to be fine. i promise. that said, here are 19 reminders for 2024 ♡

1. you can read every in/out list there is, but you still have to figure out what works for you because there is no one size fits all when it comes to human emotion.
2. you don’t need a new year to start over. not happy where you are in 3 months? begin again.
3. things don’t happen overnight, including transformation. if you seek results too soon, you’re going to wind up disappointed.
4. you are the only person who decides what is significant to you.
5. choose your people wisely. it’s not about distance - it’s about who’s ‘there’, and who loves you.
6. overthinking is every bit as dangerous as not thinking at all - balance is key.
7. being lonely and being alone are not one and the same.
8. you won’t always get the closure you need or deserve; sometimes you just have to give it to yourself.
9. it’s easier to process things when you take a step back and separate yourself from them for awhile.
10. there’s nothing wrong with therapy. sharing your feelings, and talking your way through them is iconic. period.
11. when forgiveness is too hard to muster up acceptance is fine.
12. reality is multifaceted.
13. so is emotion.
14. curiosity is a power. be curious. always.
15. there will always be a song lyric to describe exactly how you’re feeling at this very moment, you just have to find it.
16. write it down. your thoughts, your feelings, your hopes, your dislikes…all of it. self talk is real and it’s spectacular.
17. the right person for you probably isn’t a replica of the dream person you thought up in your mind - that’s okay.
18. it’s also okay if you make mistakes. we’re human. mistakes are a part of life. don’t beat yourself up over them.
19. long story short, you’ll survive.

xx
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12.31.2023

2023

a reminder that for all of the times 2023 looked like smiles and laughter, it also looked like tears and heartbreak. it’s okay if your 2023 was a bit of both (it’s called balance for a reason). it’s okay if your lesson learned was that some things get broken and stay broken, no matter how much you try and piece them back together. it’s okay if your big takeaway was that things don’t always work out the way you want them to, regardless of how well-laid your plans were. it’s also okay if you’re still navigating through rough times, trying to seek out better ones. if 2023 was everything, everywhere all at once, congratulations…you did it right. love you.🫶🏻

xx
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12.25.2023

happy christmas angels!

happy christmas angels. <33 yes, the holidays can be extremely lonely. for many of us (read: most), the holidays bring to light the fact that we never had the ‘perfect’ family that we dreamed about in our childhood fantasies (plot twist: there’s no such thing as perfect). it’s okay if today looks like lying on the floor with your AirPods listening to playlists to quiet your noisy mind; or binging movies to make you laugh, or cry, or reminisce, or contemplate why that letter to Hogwarts never arrived. it’s okay if you’re spending the day cuddling with your furbaby (or maybe you, like me, are spending the morning walking dogs at a shelter). it’s okay if you’re ordering pizza and burning cookies as opposed to carving turkey and devouring the perfect pumpkin pie. it’s also okay if you’re excited to spend time with your family. or if you’re barely tolerating their invasive questions and snarky comments and are counting down the seconds until they vacate the premises. today will take billions of different shapes for billions of different people, and each will simply be what it is. maybe not good, maybe not bad…just moments. take them for what they are, feel the way you need to feel, and move forward. ilysm.❤️

xx
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10.16.2021

8.05.2021

BOOK REVIEW: Summer of '79 by Darren Sapp



“You never forget the friends you grew up with. —Unknown”

My love for Stranger Things led me to Darren Sapp's Summer of '79, and I can honestly say that I am not mad about it. This was the perfect book to delve into during 4th of July weekend, when the temps were high, and all I wanted to do was laze around, enjoying the simplicity of summer. This book was my bestie during that period, what with the presence of The Oz arcade, to morning stops at the library, and afternoons spent gabbing with the DQ Gang {more on them later}, or constructing a top secret clubhouse down Devil's Backbone. Summer of '79 embraced the charm and curiosity that couples with the innocence of childhood, and will quickly capture the heart of multiple generations of readers.

Thirteen-year-old Kevin Bishop and his buddies {Larry Woodard, Slade Littlejohn, and Rut and Wendy Rutledge} plan on spending their summer playing baseball, swimming, and constructing a fort deep in the woods that will give them reprieve from their parents. After all, in Mead Creek, Texas, a locale known for a Civil War skirmish, and the 1912 unsolved triple murder of the Claymore family, there is little else to do to keep oneself cool and occupied. Little did they know, they were about to awaken their sleepy town to a decades-old secret.

Devil's Backbone is legendary - known as the location where the Claymore murderer has roamed since that fateful day in 1912. No longer used by vehicles, it has become a long-forgotten road, overgrown with brush, with a single entity located along the way: the Claymore estate. Devil's Backbone also happens to be the simplest route to the fort that Kevin and his friends are building, so they begin navigating it daily. It is during these trips that Kevin sees movement at the Claymore estate: first a person at a window, then a light on. He's convinced it's the ghost of Dickie Claymore, the lone suriving Claymore in the massacre; but perhaps it isn't his ghost at all. Upon further investigation {and frequent trips to the local Dairy Queen to gab with a group of old-timers dubbed the DQ Gang who congregate daily to shoot the breeze}, Kevin, Larry, Slade, Rut, and Wendy learn that Dickie is still alive, and living in the old Claymore estate. As they begin spending more time with the reclusive Dickie, the friends resolve to find justice for his family. But in doing so, they will shake their quiet town to its core.

I liked this one. Did it contain groundbreaking detective work or paranormal entities? Not really. But the innocence, simplicity, and familiarity found within the pages hook you nonetheless. The concept of just waking up and hopping on your bike to seek adventure in town is something that Gen Z, or even Millenials haven't experienced for themselves; so seeing it through the eyes of these young characters is endearing. Also endearing is the DQ Gang, who represent MC's every bit as much as our five protagonists {and provide many a chuckle}. Fans of Stranger Things or The Sandlot will quickly find themselves drawn to the pages. The perfect nostalgic read for a summer day.


Star Rating: ****


xx
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7.22.2021

BOOK REVIEW: To All the Boys I've Loved Before by Jenny Han



Plot Twist: I, a hardcore anti-romance reader, felt as if my heart had grown three sizes by the time I turned the last page of Jenny Han's To All the Boys I've Loved Before because I loved it! So much so that I read it from start to finish in one day, and legit feel all swoon-y at the mere mention of Peter Kavinsky. Le sigh. This is the first time I have crushed on a book boy since Michael Moscovitz of Meg Cabot's The Princess Diaries, so this. is. huge.

Sixteen-year-old Lara Jean Song Covey is prepped for a year of changes. She's officially an upperclassman {Junior, thank you very much}; has taken on the role of woman of the house, what with her older sister Margot off to college in Scotland; and is finally being forced to become comfortable behind the wheel now that she has her younger sister, Kitty, to care for. One change Lara Jean didn't expect to come her way is that involving...boys.

You see, Lara Jean has been in love a total of 5 times, each relationship forever immortalized in an unsent love letter kept in a special hatbox nestled in her closet. Those relationships, however? 100% one-sided - as in, the guys never knew how Lara Jean felt about them; hence the unsent love letters trope. Then one day, the letters find themselves out in the world - arriving in the hands of all of the boys Lara Jean has loved before, and opening up a can of worms that may be impossible to contain.

Peter Kavinsky, Josh Sanderson, Lucas James, Kenny Donati, and John Ambrose McClaren. Lara Jean's five loves. Though overall harmless {albeit embarrassing} for them to learn how Lara Jean once felt about them, one of those letters can cause huge trouble in her life. Josh Sanderson. Lara Jean knew him first; but he became Margot's boyfriend. For a long time. Him learning that Lara Jean once {okay, still} harbored romantic feelings towards him could ruin everything. And if the news made it back to Margot? Let's just say that she'd be a dead girl walking. So she creates a ruse with one of her letter recipients...Peter Kavinsky himself.

Beautiful, popular, confident...Peter Kavinsky is the guy of every girl's dreams. He's also nursing a broken heart, having just been dumped by his longtime girlfriend, Genevieve 'Gen' Mitchell. In his eyes, if he fakes a relationship with Lara Jean, he'll make Gen so jealous that she'll come crawling back to him. In Lara Jean's eyes, faking a relationship with Peter is just what she needs to sell Josh on the fact that she is so not into him. It's a win-win for them both; but as they become more entangled in one another's lives, scrapbook-making, cupcake baking, suspender-wearing Lara Jean realizes that she may just be falling for the handsome jock. And Peter K? Yeah, it may just be falling right back.

You guys!!! This book is so. cute. NGL here, I never would have given it a shot if not for the Netflix movie {which is adorbs and cast so well!}; but I am so glad that I did! It is not everyday that you find a romance that is simply sweet - that feels wholesome and charming without 21st century vulgarities; but To All the Boys I've Loved Before is just that. It engages you through the characters - the ultra-relatable Lara Jean {seriously, I adore her!}; the oft-times over-the-top Kitty; the more-than-meets-the-eye Peter K; and even Lara Jean's well-meaning father. The one character I could not stand, however, was Margot. In the movie she was fine; in the book she is intolerable: bossy, self-centered, and utterly obnoxious. Nevertheless, her role is not huge, so it's possible to ignore her presence most of the time.

Though dubbed a romance; To All the Boys I've Loved Before goes beyond that, highlighting the importance of family, which is such a beautiful sentiment, and not one highly-represented in YA. Bottom line: I loved it, and cannot wait to read the sequel, P.S. I Still Love You.


Star Rating: ****


xx
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7.08.2021

BOOK REVIEW: Truly Devious: A Mystery by Maureen Johnson



“Stevie had no fears of the dead. The living, however, sometimes gave her the creeps.”

NGL here, my Harriet the Spy-loving heart did a little jump for joy while reading this one because Maureen Johnson's Truly Devious truly felt like a more grown-up, tech savvy version of the book that literally shaped my childhood, with Stevie taking up the role of Harriet, Nate starring as Sport, and Janelle headlining as the inimitable Janie. But I digress...Truly Devious, in a sea of supernatural, stands out as an unputdownable thriller in the vein of Agatha Christie and Sherlock Holmes that will make. you. swoon.

There is nothing truly remarkable about 16-year-old Stevie Bell, so when she lands a spot at the exclusive Ellingham Academy, a school nestled in the remote mountains of Vermont, priding itself on its gifted student body, she questions whether a mistake has been made. After all, her only true talent lies in her obsession with true crime - particularly a case that took place at Ellingham Academy eighty years ago {more on that later}. Nevertheless, Stevie is desperate to fulfill her desire of finding a dead body {morbid, I know}, and experiencing adventure that will put her on a path to becoming a detective, so she heads to the elusive institution. If a mistake has been made, they'll simply send her home - no harm, no foul.

A free institution for the best and brightest thinkers, inventors, and artists across the country; Ellingham Academy was founded in the early Twentieth Century by Albert Ellingham - a tycoon determined to create a novel learning experience highlighting that "learning is a game." But soon after opening its doors to the public, Ellingham's beloved wife and young daughter go missing. In their place is a mocking riddle constructed of possible heinous deaths the pair may endure, and an ominous signature...Truly Devious.

A cold case dubbed one of the greatest unsolved mysteries in American history; Stevie is convinced that by gaining access to Ellingham, she'll be able to hunt for clues and solve the mystery - thereby placing her on the map as an up and coming detective to be reckoned with. But soon after arriving at Ellingham, Stevie finds herself embroiled in a different death, one carried out by a Truly Devious copycat, and knows that it's time to put her detective skills to work to catch the killer - before the killer catches her.

My one qualm about Truly Devious was that I did not discover it sooner, because it was everything I've been hoping to find in a YA - romance on the backburner, mystery at the forefront, and a dynamite cast of characters. Though the idea of Ellingham, at times, seems too good to be true {free in this day and age??}; Johnson makes it work splendidly, and makes it difficult not to complete the book in one sitting. NGL, some may feel very perturbed by the cliffhanger of all cliffhangers at the end; but having bonded with the characters, I didn't see the loose end as a flaw - rather, a chance to come up with a few theories of my own before snagging the sequel, The Vanishing Stair.

If you're seeking a new mystery series to sink your teeth into, this one comes highly recommended. Bravo Ms. Johnson!


Star Rating: *****


xx
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7.01.2021

angele

Free People Angele Minidress in DRAGONFRUIT PUNCH

Jury's still out on why I'm crushing so hard on this dress, but I'm obsessed and kind of want it in all of the colors!

xx
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6.26.2021

stripes for days

Free People Stripes for Days Sweater & Shorts Set in SUNSET COMBO.

Picturing myself lounging in this cutie two-piece all summer.

xx
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6.24.2021

BOOK REVIEW: The Young Elites by Marie Lu



“No one wants you to be yourself. They want you to be the version of yourself that they like.”

Y'all, I tried so hard to like Marie Lu's The Young Elites; but there was literally nothing that I enjoyed about this book - no matter how many times I thought something might pop up to change my mind. NGL, I have had a 50/50 positivity rate with Lu's books {some I love, some I loathe, and sometimes I start to love one well after the halfway mark}; but this one just did not cut it for me. Womp womp.

One decade ago, a deadly illness known as the blood fever swept through Renaissance Italy. It claimed the lives of almost everyone it touched; but some children were spared - left with their lives, but scarred with strange markings that earned them the title malfettos {abominations}. Sixteen-year-old Adelina Amouteru is one such survivor. Her beloved mother, however, was taken; leaving her in the hands of a monstrous father who cannot see beyond her changes. Her once black hair turned silver, her eyelashes paled, and her once beautiful left eye is now nothing more than a jagged scar. In her cruel father's eyes, Adelina is only a malfetto - a burden upon their family's good name, standing in the way of lavish fortunes. Adelina thinks otherwise. She has heard of other malfettos - malfettos with strange abilities that leave people fearful; abilities that give them power. These are the Young Elites, and Adelina is determined to find them.

Burning with anger after learning her father's plans for her, Adelina kisses her younger sister, Violetta, goodbye and flees into the night. She has not gone far before she is found, and accidentally unleashes a dormant fury within, killing someone. Now armed with the knowledge that she too has powers, powers that would make people fall at her feet, she is even more convinced of her belonging to the Young Elites. But she'll have to reach them first. When she is apprehended by The Inquisition, led by the young Teren Santoro, and sentenced to death, her future seems unclear. But then she is rescued by none other than the Elites, and feels that things are falling into place. That is, until she feels their less than warm welcome.

Helmed by the handsome yet mysterious Enzo Valenciano {aka The Reaper, who, btw, gives off major Assassin's Creed vibes}, the Young Elites {aka the Dagger Society} is composed of a group of malfettos with abilities that range from manipulating other people's emotions {Raffaele} to commanding and controlling animals {Gemma}. Though their abilities are different, they share a commonality: they don't know what to make of Adelina and her illusionist abilities. Some want her dead. Enzo, however, the son of the late king of Kenettra, vouches for her, welcoming her into the folds of the Dagger Society, and determining that they will train her in her abilities. But Adelina has a secret - an agreement with Teren that she can't extricate herself from. One that will place all of her newfound Elite friends in grave danger.

This was the worst book I've read all year. Marie Lu can write, she can; but this one was just drudgery. The characters were mindblowingly boring who read like one-dimensional cardboard cutouts. I legitimately could not discern one from another because they were so uninteresting. Adelina, who I thought was going to be an amazing character was just dark and angry. And the supposed spark between her and Enzo? Yeah, I didn't feel it. In fact, I felt no chemistry between them; and even if I did, it wouldn't have mattered because Enzo was every bit as boring as Adelina. NGL, there were times when I really loved Raffaele {perhaps because of his calming nature}; but he was not strong enough to hold the weight of the entire book on his shoulders. I will say this...the ending, starring Maeve Corrigan, the Princess of Beldain was brilliant. Unfortunately, her appearance came too late for me; thus, I will not be reading the sequel The Rose Society.


Star Rating: **1/2


xx
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6.17.2021

90s

LULUS 4SI3NNA Delaney Cinched Tie Shorts in BLUE.

Digging the 90s vibes of this look.

xx
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6.10.2021

elliott

LULUS 4SI3NNA Elliott Crop One-Shoulder Sweater in NUDE.

Summer date night sorted, amiright?

xx
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6.05.2021

rainbow heart

LULUS BP. Rainbow Heart Drop Earrings in RAINBOW MULTI.

LOVE how playful these pretties are for the summertime! The $12 pricetag doesn't hurt either.

xx
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5.27.2021

BOOK REVIEW: Shadow and Bone {The Shadow and Bone Trilogy} by Leigh Bardugo



“I’ve been waiting for you a long time, Alina,” he said. “You and I are going to change the world.”

My plan was to finish Leigh Bardugo's Shadow and Bone prior to viewing the Netflix adaptation; but life got in the way, and I didn't end up turning the last page until a week after binging the show {in one day}. Regardless, my viewing didn't impact my enjoyment of the book or vice versa. NGL, I actually preferred the show over the book {#sorrynotsorry}, but both were quite charming in their own way.

Ravka has been ravaged by the Shadow Fold {aka the Unsea or the Fold} for as long as 17-year-old Army cartographer, Alina Starkov, can remember. A consequence of dark magic that placed a swath of darkness in the midst of Ravka, splitting it in half {the East and the West}, and making the only viable option for crossing it {sometimes successfully, sometimes un} via Sandskiff; the Shadow Fold is responsible for taking the lives of Alina's parents, leaving her orphaned as a child. It is also responsible for the deaths of her bestie {and not-so-secret crush} Malyen Oretsev's {aka Mal} parents.

While attempting to cross the Shadow Fold with her squadron, the Skiff she is aboard is attacked by Volcra, the monsters residing within. Faced with near-certain death, Alina unconsciously calls upon a long-dormant power, enabling her to hold the darkness back and make it out of the Fold alive. It is only once she has reached safety that she is identified as a Grisha - or, better yet, a Sun Summoner. The only one of her kind. Saddled with the knowledge that she may be the only one who can eliminate the Shadow Fold, and free Ravka; Alina is thrust into the Grisha's world of aristocracy and dangerous politics. Under the watchful eye of Baghra and the handsome yet oft-times frightening Darkling, Alina must master her gift all while surviving the backstabbing behaviors synonymous with life in the court.

If I'm being honest I have to admit...Alina is fairly lackluster when it comes to a protagonist. As is Mal. Unfortunately, having binged the Netflix adaptation prior to finishing the book, I fell for Kaz, Inej, and Jesper. They were the characters who kept me coming back for more; so to see them missing from Shadow and Bone left me gutted. I later learned that they are characters in Bardugo's other book series, Six of Crows, which I am so excited to read; but have been advised to hold off on until I have completed the Shadow and Bone Trilogy. So will I? In time...

Though I'm not ready to visit Ravka again at the moment, I do feel that Alina and Mal have the potential to grow on me with subsequent adventures, like the sequel Siege and Storm, which I've heard surpasses its predecessor. Whether that is true or not remains to be seen; but I'm willing to give it a whirl if it brings me one step closer to meeting the novel versions of Inej, Jesper, and Kaz.


Star Rating: ***1/2


xx
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3.25.2021

back country

BB Dakota Back Country Cardigan in IVORY

Swooning over that Western-style print. So cozy!


xx
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3.04.2021

flirty day

Billabong Flirty Day Puff Sleeve Smocked Romper in GREY MULTI

Is it just me, or was this cutie crafted with a picnic date in mind?


xx
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