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December 2024 What are you reading?
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Bill
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Dec 04, 2024 06:46PM

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Also will soon be reading A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens for another group's BotM. Never read it and because I have an Audible sub, I have access to Tim Curry's audiobook of it. Curry is hands down my favorite audiobook narrator and it's such a loss he can no longer record audiobooks due to his health.
Other upcoming reads: As Many Ships as Stars by Weyodi Oldbear, which will finish up my personal Indigenous Writers challenge I started last month, and Ice by Anna Kavan which is part of my personal end-of-the-year tbr clean-up.

This was my first Danielle Lori book, and I absolutely adored it.
I impulsively ordered this book, captivated by the beautiful cover, and I'm so glad I took the chance. "The Sweetest Oblivion" features a charming yet feisty heroine, Elena Abelli, and a ruthless yet passionate mafia don, Nico Russo.
The slow burn romance is my favorite part of the book; it's so well-crafted. The tension between Elena and Nico is palpable. Despite knowing they shouldn't be drawn to each other, their attraction is undeniable, and it's impossible not to root for them. I appreciated how their initial perceptions of each other gradually shifted as they became better acquainted.
Danielle Lori introduces a unique twist to the arranged marriage trope, which I won't spoil, but I enjoyed the unexpected turns. This book distinguishes itself within the mafia romance genre with its exquisite writing. A quick note—I absolutely loved the small illustrations and quotes at the beginning of each chapter. I didn't give it five stars only because the ending felt a bit hurried, but it remains one of my most cherished reads.
I would wholeheartedly recommend this book (and the entire series) for its endearing characters, perfect tension, and exquisite writing. To sum up the book in one sentence: it's the most delightful slow-burn romance I've ever read.

…inspired by the movie Wicked. I’m deep diving into the world of Oz. Desperate for more Wicked content.

My *** review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

My **** review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

My **** review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/

A Last Supper of Queer Apostles gathers together a collection of Pedro Lemebel's essays (crónicas). Lemebel (1952-2015) is/was a brilliant writer whose work focused on the marginal communities of Chile: gay men, the poor, sex workers, and transsexuals. His work is angry, inventive, playful, keenly observing. Reading his work is rather like watching someone juggling fire, with the same uneasy potential for beauty or disaster.
My ***** review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Imagine a Venn diagram with a circle for mystery; another for history of medicine; another for gay love; another for "resurrectionists," who at one time supplied medical schools with cadavers by digging up the recently buried; and then one more for notorious killers Burke and Hare (because, if you just kill people and immediately sell the bodies to medical schools, you don't have to do all that laborious digging). That little spot where all five circles overlap? That's where A. Rae Dunlap's The Resurrectionist fits in.
My **** review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

My ***** review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


I'm adding this title to the discussion because Will Somers, the central character, is bisexual.
My **** review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



My ***** review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I read the first part (this novel is like a collection of novellas) and it's about Catholic priest who goes a planet called Hyperion where he encounters a humanoid species that Simmons describes with very pejorative, ableist and racist terms. The priest proceeds to obsess over the humanoid species' sex, genitals and ability to sexually reproduce. It's so fucking gross. It's like a TERF's social media feed, but from 30 years ago.
So after reading the first part, I googled Mr Simmons to learn he is a right-winger, Islamophobe and queerphobe, which means he's probably on the gender critical bandwagon too. So disappointing. I hope the rest of the novel isn't this deprived, because as a big SF fan I would at least like to understand why this novel is so popular.


…inspired by the movie Wicked. I’m deep diving into the world of Oz. Desperate for more Wicked content."
I, too, just read it because of the movie!


Wow, I never have heard of that. I've added to my Kindle shopping list!

The Book of Awesome Queer Heroes: How the LGBTQ+ Community Changed the World for the Better

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Books mentioned in this topic
The Book of Awesome Queer Heroes: How the LGBTQ+ Community Changed the World for the Better (other topics)Two People (other topics)
Two People (other topics)
My Lesbian Experience with Loneliness (other topics)
Hyperion (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Kabi Nagata (other topics)Geoff Ryman (other topics)
Christen Randall (other topics)
T.J. Klune (other topics)