Reviews and Comments

April Wick Reads Too Much

kg6gfq@bookrastinating.com

Joined 2 years, 6 months ago

Mostly sapphic romance, YA, sci-fi, fantasy, but I'll try most genres of fiction (except horror). Would probably read more graphic novels, but most of them don't display too well on my e-reader.

Trans gal on a strange bicycle. (she/her)

Mastodon: @kg6gfq@octodon.social

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Lily Seabrooke: The Rules of Love

Rule number one: never fall in love.

Amber’s rules have kept her safe from …

Sweet & amusing

Worth it just for Scarlet's over-the-top banter, and she (despite her insistence to the contrary) is not even a main character.

Bonus: Contains sapphic trans representation! albeit not from a main character.

See book description for CWs.

Lily Seabrooke, Jacqueline Ramsden: Not Like Before

Lola never wanted to be on camera alongside an A-list star—but maybe Mackenzie is everything …

Lovely grumpy/sunshine romance

I read Not Like Before when I was having a bad day and it was just the sort of sweet, lovely book I needed, full of people who really care about each other (well, except some of the antagonists I guess). The plot was driven by very believable aspects of the characters' personalities instead of relying on miscommunication or other contrivances - at no point did I find myself wanting to grab the characters and shout, "Just talk to each other!" in their faces, as is sometimes the case with romance novels.

I'm so incredibly grateful that there are authors like Seabrooke and Ramsden writing books with excellent trans representation. Their experience may not be identical to mine, but it's similar enough that I cried with empathy at some of Mackenzie's more emotional moments. Also, it's neat to see a nonbinary antagonist who is a fully-developed secondary character with …

Marie Cardno: How to Get a Girlfriend (When You're a Terrifying Monster) (2022, Rare Design Ltd.)

Life is tough when you're an eldritch abomination.

Trillin isn't technically a person. She's …

Hilarious & Adorable

No rating

The worldbuilding and general feel of this remind me of Naomi Novik's Scholomance books, albeit slightly lighter. Similar themes, too - Trillin in particular has the whole "my natural talent is for being a terrifying monster but I choose otherwise" thing going on.

Sian & Trillin trying to figure out interspecies flirting is very amusing.

Kate Scelsa: Improbable Magic for Cynical Witches (2022, HarperCollins Publishers)

A witchy, atmospheric lesbian contemporary romance set in Salem—from the acclaimed author of Fans of …

Didn't quite draw me in, but did get me curious about tarot

For some reason, I didn't find this to be the most engaging read. Good characters, good prose, fine plot, but I think the constant switching between tarot explainer, present narrative, and flashback narrative kept me from really diving into the story.

That said, it's the first thing that's ever made me actually curious about tarot. I've met plenty of people who are into tarot, read books that reference it, etc., but this is the first time I've ever thought it might be relevant to me.

Helena Greer: Season of Love (2022, Grand Central Publishing)

When Miriam Blum unexpectedly inherits part of her eccentric aunt's Christmas tree farm, she has …

Really a good read; not just the trope-remix that it sounds like from the description

I didn't read this immediately because I've read kind of a lot of holiday romances lately and they can be frustratingly formulaic, but it turned out to be quite good!

The central conflict wasn't just about the characters failing to communicate or trust or whatever. When the characters did have difficulty it was (1) very plausible, given their backstories, and (2) something they processed with a decent level of emotional maturity. It also showcases a really lovely and supportive found-family.

Overall, the book nicely skated the edge between trope-y and sincere. It could be described as a holiday homecoming romance between an artist who's famous on social media and a butch christmas tree farmer, which makes it sound like pure trope remix. But! It's also a romance between a recovering alcoholic and someone fleeing an abusive parent, which sounds way darker than it is. It's both of those, …

L-J Baker: Broken Wings (EBook, Bold Strokes Books)

In a magical world where being different is the norm, why must Rye Woods fear …

More serious than I expected from fantasy sapphic romance, in a good way

Before I say much else, I should note that this book ought to be CW'd for homophobia, sexual assault, and violence. Not that it's particularly dark, and most of that is in the backstory, it's just not the fluff I expected when I started the book expecting a fantasy romance with faries and dryads.

Baker's characters - especially Rye - have a serious enough backstory to explain the relationship issues they work through over the course of the book. The fantasy realm where they live has serious problems with classism, racism, xenophobia, homophobia, addiction... basically, all the real-world problems.

I was disappointed to not learn as much about Flora - it seemed like there was scope for more character development in her interactions with her family and friends.

Other things I liked: * There's a teenager in the story who mostly just does normal teenager things. * …

C. L. Polk: Witchmark (2018)

In an original world reminiscent of Edwardian England in the shadow of a World War, …

Platinum-Level Bicycle Friendly Book (& generally excellent)

Slightly edited version of the review I posted on Mastodon a while back @ octodon.social/@kg6gfq/109491337149140152

Bicycle representation

I rate this a Platinum-Level Bicycle Friendly Book!

I so enjoy reading something where the main character and the general populace all travel by bike. There was even a bike chase scene! The book did end with the frustratingly common "Oh no, we need to get somewhere fast, better use one of those new automobiles to get there in time" trope... but it turns out the power source for the cars (and other new tech) is horrifically unethical, so at least cars are acknowledged as problematic.

Occasionally I encounter a book with cyclist characters who just "ride their bike" and it feels one-dimensional. The characters in Witchmark, on the other hand, get winded climbing hills, carry stuff in bike baskets, use bike locks, notice - in detail - …

Robin Hale: Silhouette (EBook, 2018, Self Published) No rating

Dr. Molly Fawn’s life is surprisingly normal, considering that she spends her days running support …

Disregard the generic cover, this book is silly and a bit brilliant

No rating

Superheros, heists, sapphic romance, witty banter, an underdog "villain" with a heart of gold, a little holmes/moriarty-esque flirting-by-trying-to-outsmart-each-other.

The story moved along nicely, the main characters were entertaining and had good chemistry, the best friend secondary characters were well-developed.

This might be my favorite of Robin Hale's three books to date!

Robin Hale: Under the Harvest Moon No rating

Laurel Pearson is ready for adventure.

The sort of adventure that means finding your …

I did not fall for the magic soulmates; sorry.

No rating

I could have done without the whole Magic Soulmates deal; it was a little too Twilight-esque, especially in a witches/vampires/shapeshifters book. Also... I get that Rhea and Laurel were both dealing with some pretty intense personal stuff that got in the way of them communicating, but could SOMEONE in the coven not have given Laurel a crash course in navigating magical society, somewhere in between working at the bookstore and going to parties?

It was good writing, a reasonable plot, and perfectly fine characters, but for whatever reason this didn't catch me quite as strongly as Hale's other books.

reviewed Chasing Stars by Alex K. Thorne (The Superheroine Collection #3)

Alex K. Thorne: Chasing Stars (2018, Ylva Publishing)

For superhero Swiftwing, crime fighting isn’t her biggest battle. Nor is it having to meet …

Tropes collide! A surprisingly good book ensues.

I got a chapter or two into this, figured out what was going on, and spent most of the rest of the book giggling at the premise. I mean... A Hollywood star's personal assistant gets roped into a fake-dating arrangement by her boss (to whom she is, of course, very attracted). But wait! She's also secretly an alien superhero, and said boss is acquainted with both the hero identity and the mild-mannered PA.

It could easily descend into silly hijinx, but Thorne manages to give the characters some actual depth with their respective trust issues. Not so much relationship angst that I wanted to throw rotten fruit and shout "just talk to each other already!" but enough that I kept reading because I cared about them and wanted to know how they'd work things out.

I do wish the secondary characters had been fleshed out a little further, …

Fletcher DeLancey: Mac vs. PC

As a computer technician at the university, Anna Petrowski knows she has one thing in …

Apple should sponsor this book, but at least it's cozy and somewhat class-conscious?

I like the university setting, and the acknowledgement of class/hierarchy in university society was an unexpected bonus. I like that the POV character is in IT support. I appreciate that it didn't go too far into "our relationship has failed and my life is over, whatever shall I do, Friar Laurence*?" angst as so many romance novels tend to; it just felt like normal "that sucked and I'm disappointed" angst.

The book is aware of class and takes the less-common tack of pointing out that snobbery can go both directions, but it isn't particularly critical of social or economic inequality. If anything, it valorizes upper-middle-class university-educated lifestyles. sigh

The computer stuff was... fine? It really ought to get a sponsorship from Apple for how excited the characters are about Macs. I was surprised that nobody at a sizeable research university mentioned Linux even once.

Anyway, it was …

Robin Hale: Technically Faking (EBook)

Iris Spark knows exactly what she wants.

It hasn’t made her many friends, but …

Shell scripts are her love language, and I like it.

Aaaah! It's sapphic fake-dating between a techie who reads as autistic and someone who appreciates her frankness. Writing is good, plot moves fast, not too much angst for my taste at the moment.

Iris is a little stereotype-y (brilliant coder who is also successful in business in spite of not being good with people) and I'm not convinced that she would still be doing code reviews as CEO of a sizeable tech company. Even so, I really enjoyed her character. Many of the technical details were reasonably plausible.

I could have done with a little less of a "for-profit silicon valley tech entrepreneurs with brilliant ideas can change the world" attitude, though. Not that it was a major plot point, but it was definitely present.

The epilogue from a different POV was a fun twist; now I want to read a book about Carrie.

Oh, and …