el_staplador: (Default)
[personal profile] el_staplador
Two novels about as different in subject matter and tone as it's possible to be while remaining within the scope of this community. Although both are fascinated with ink and paper (or vellum, as the case may be), now I come to think of it... Anyway, I enjoyed both of them tremendously and found both difficult to put down.

Paper Love (Jae) is a gentle romance between Susanne, a troubleshooting business consultant, and her uncle's employee Anja. The uncle's business is a stationery shop, which is, unbeknown to Anja, being propped up by his savings. Susanne's brought in to sort things out. The problem is, she doesn't really get why people (Anja included) would be interested in pens and ink in the twenty-first century... This isn't so much an 'opposites attract' romance as a 'people get off on the wrong foot and then sort things out' romance, and I enjoyed watching things getting sorted out. It's set in Freiburg; the city is described with affectionate detail, and I found myself wanting to go there. Maybe next year... Recommended if you want something calming where you know everything's going to work out.

The Gospel of Eve (Rachel Mann) is - well, I attended the launch event on Zoom and the author called it a 'theological thriller', possibly by comparison with a 'psychological thriller'? Anyway, it's set in a theological college in the mid nineties, though it opens with a prologue in which the narrator looks back from about now at the moment she discovered her lover's body hanging in the chapel. Kitty, the narrator, is attempting to escape her working class background. Her relationship (first friends, then lovers) with Evie is a step in that direction; her PhD in medieval history gets the two of them the entrée to a clique of
with an interest in rare books and unconventional disciplines. Inevitably, it all goes horribly wrong; the fascination lies in how. Recommended if you like the gothic, and things where you never quite know what's going on or what the characters are up to.
hebethen: (books)
[personal profile] hebethen
I had the good fortune to come across two of these in a row without even having had to look for them!

First: Naomi Kritzer's Catfishing on the CatNet, a near-future SF thriller about an internet-loving teen and her mother constantly on the run from a mysterious abusive father, contains a sweet and very organic f/f subplot. It's apparently set up to be the start of a series, and I'm really looking forward to the next book.

Second: Shamim Sarif's The Athena Protocol, a contemporary-ish spy thriller featuring a small all-female rogue spy agency, also contains an f/f subplot, though perhaps a tick more sub than CotCN depending on how you look at it. This romance is a lot more fraught, in the ways you'd expect from a spy thriller, if that's more your speed.

(My thoughts on these books as a whole)

(Bonus: Naomi Kritzer also wrote an f/f fantasy duology, Fires of the Faithful and Turning the Storm, which I particularly enjoyed for its portrayal of agnosticism in a world where believers command actual magical powers, among other things.)
monanotlisa: (naomi & emily - skins)
[personal profile] monanotlisa
Aaand we have come to the end of my catch-up reviews. From here on in, it's new material that I will post. But for today, an actual Friday, we come to the book the community icon is from: I found a high-quality shot of the cover and used it.

Anyway, on to the novel everyone, absolutely everyone needs to read -- it's one of the best to come across my greedy bookbworm hands:

Fingersmith, by Sarah Waters
monanotlisa: (KIMA! - the wire)
[personal profile] monanotlisa
Again, I am merely catching y'all up on older reviews; please feel free to let me know that's not what you want. I will also review newly read books from here on in, of course.

If you like cyborgs and political thrillers, this one's for you.

Maker Space, by K.B. Spangler

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fffriday: A pair of white women's gloves (from Fingersmith) and the caption FFFridays (Default)
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