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[personal profile] rocky41_7
I'm slightly unsure this one really belongs here, as it's not totally clear the protagonist of this novel still identifies as a woman by the end of the book, but it's close enough to share and still likely to be of interest, I think. She Who Became the Sun is a historical fantasy novel by Shelley Parker-Chan. It is the first in a duology and the description is:

She Who Became the Sun reimagines the rise to power of the Ming Dynasty’s founding emperor.
 
This one I grabbed on impulse at the bookstore back in January because I vaguely remembered hearing about it somewhere. As with my last review, I'm going to keep this short because I simply do not have the energy for more. I liked this book and I do plan to read the next one. There were moments I wasn't sure about it, but I'm glad I stuck with it and I think Parker-Chan crafts some very interesting characters here.

The main protagonist Zhu is fascinatingly driven and unrepentantly ambitious. She is also ruthless in her pursuit of her destiny, which starts to get pretty interesting at the end of this novel, and I expect will feature even more prominently in the next. She also reads, to me, as asexual or something close to it, which as an ace person myself was fun to see, especially because it isn't treated like a problem in her relationships. Neither does it stem from her own complex relationship with gender--it's just how she is.

The deuterogonist Ouyang is every bit as interesting, even though we don't see his POV until the middle part of the book. He is someone who is so viscerally torn between feeling compelled towards revenge and yet not desiring anything that will actually come of it that it's so interesting to watch his fate play out. I think Parker-Chan does a great job getting you into Ouyang's head during his perspective chapters and it was so interesting to me how Zhu leans into their connection while Ouyang is repulsed by it.

Recommend if you:
  • Enjoy morally gray/amoral protagonists--both Zhu and Ouyang do shady to outright horrifying things in pursuit of their goals.
  • Want queer relationships--won't give spoilers on this but both Zhu and Ouyang have queer experiences ,
  • Enjoy a historical setting that leans into the contemporary cultures--we get a good look both at the culture of the Mongols and of the Chinese.
Do not recommend if you:
  • Like heavily detailed stories--my only real criticism of the novel is that it often skims over things I would have liked explored in more depth.
  • Like a happy ending--of course this is only 1 of 2 books, but based on how it's going, I would not hold out hope for a happy end. The end of this first novel was not an uncomplicated victory.
  • Prefer romance to be a core of the story--as noted there are queer relationships here, but for the most part they are not the central part of the novel.

Crossposted from my main and [community profile] books 
auroracloud: a woman wearing a short dress and sitting on a sofa, reading with her face hidden behind the book, next to bookshelf (reading: on the sofa)
[personal profile] auroracloud
Something of a review in my journal. This short, intricate, beautiful fantasy novel tells the story of a woman who has to go to live in the palace of a female dragon (one with both human-like and more dragon-like forms), in exchange for the dragon healing someone in her village, and she finds herself falling in love with the dragon. It's inspired by the Beauty and the Beast and by Asian culture and mythology (I believe specifically Vietnamese), but weaves its own tale of love, otherness, outcasts, families, and learning to see beyond appearances and to choose your actions rather than letting others define who you are. Heartily recommended for those who read the description and think they might like it.
oursin: Lady Strachan and Lady Warwick kissing in the park (Regency lesbians)
[personal profile] oursin
Recommendation of this fantasy sequence posted here.
mrs_leary: (green silk dress)
[personal profile] mrs_leary
I really enjoyed reading Breaking Character, a recently released novel by Lee Winter.

My review: A terrific romance that ticks all the boxes. I really enjoyed this tale of how two women, with much in common but also such different characters, found their way towards each other. In many ways the main trope is "opposites attract", but it's also more than that. The world behind the scenes of the entertainment industry felt realistic, which made it particularly irritating how each woman felt such pressure to remain deep in the closet, even in relation to each other. It shouldn't work like that, but I'm all too afraid that it does. On a brighter note, the wide range of secondary characters were a joy to read about.

It's available from Ylva Publishing.
isis: (medusa)
[personal profile] isis
I am not a fan of the romance genre in books, but I love other-genre novels that have f/f romance as a sub-plot or incidental background. Two (very different) fantasy books I read this year and really enjoyed fall into this category: Jane, Unlimited by Kristin Cashore, and Foundryside by Robert Jackson Bennett. I've discussed these books earlier this year on my own journal, but I thought [community profile] fffriday people might be interested in them. (And it is a complete coincidence that I've requested fic for these books for Yuletide! I'm certainly not angling for treats, oh, no! Anyway, there's not much time before the deadline so they'd probably have to be NYR stories anyway.... *g*)

Jane, Unlimited )

Foundryside )

If you read either of these books, I'd love to hear what you think. And please write me Jane/Ivy and Sancia/Berenice fic.
oursin: Lady Strachan and Lady Warwick kissing in the park (Regency lesbians)
[personal profile] oursin

Having recently had occasion to think about them - and their often forgotten devoted maidservant Mary Caryll - I have posted about the Ladies of Llangollen, famed historical icons of romantic female friendship.

alexseanchai: Katsuki Yuuri wearing a blue jacket and his glasses and holding a poodle, in front of the asexual pride flag with a rainbow heart inset. (Default)
[personal profile] alexseanchai
This week my blog was a stop on the blog tour for the release of Ceillie Simkiss's contemporary f/f novella Learning Curves. I interviewed Ceillie about her own and her leads' neurodivergences and literary preferences.
kore: (we are groot)
[personal profile] kore
Review/rec of a 9,695K Gamora/Nebula story that is sad, hot, funny, tragic and ultimately triumphant.

"Steel Heart, Sister Stone"

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