homegirl has 5 houses, destroyed buildings in another court and even with all the money she has, all she can offer the people of nc is painting classes despite knowing what it is like to be poor/starving?? humble??
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@avidhater
homegirl has 5 houses, destroyed buildings in another court and even with all the money she has, all she can offer the people of nc is painting classes despite knowing what it is like to be poor/starving?? humble??
the people hating on nesta and being extremely condescending towards her as if feyrug's narration isn't biased and miss maas purposelly made feyrug out to be a victim really make me want to tear my hair out
Mirko Hanák (Czech, 1921-1971, b. Martin, Slovakia, d. Prague, Czech Republic) - Paintings: Watercolors
I think the coolest thing about being a writer is that as long as you write, you /are/ a writer. It doesn't matter if you're not great at it, it doesn't matter if you've put a project down for now or you're taking a small break from writing altogether, if you're not published or don't have any plans of being published.
You write things? You're a writer.
I just think that's pretty rad.
Joe Brainard Pansies, 1968 Watercolor and collage on paper
Jung Ho Yeon for Vogue Korea July 2021. Photographed by Hyea W. Kang
Man SJM and ACOTAR is so cheugy lmao, even the fandom is. The quotes, the merch, the character design of the main heroines, the ‘humour’. Live, love, laugh middle class white American liberal woman aesthetic and fantasies.
my favourite thing is when people try to claim there are so many wlw in s//jm books. and then accuse ME of not having read the books??? sir i can give you a fucking LIST of all the wlw, i’ve read these books so many times.
mor is such bad rep ppl are still disagreeing on her sexuality, ha/sar is a villainized woc lesbian described as “ugly” multiple times, em/erie is 1 throwaway line in a book full of insufferably straight sex, two human queens (also villains) MIGHT be married but they don’t have names and were on screen for like 2 pages, juni/per & fury can 100% be mistaken for just really good friends by literally any homophobe & have barely any plot relevance or page time, the two gfs in ma/non’s coven are very unimportant until they SACRIFICE themselves for her, man/on’s grandmother is UNNAMED and described as sleeping with a “young” witch, fey/re has a dream of amara/ntha sexually torturing her (associating wlw sexuality with torture) even though AMARA/NTHA LITERALLY NEVER DID ANYTHING LIKE THAT TO FEY/RE and in fact it was RHYS who treated her like that while she was utm.
also, even if there were “so many wlw” (or so many woc, or so many etc etc), quantity =/= quality. the majority of your cast can be poc and still written in racist ways. you can write a lot of female characters and still write them in a sexist way. this is basic shit, dude.
“So many wlw”? Well, this is stupid af, so let’s do a little breakdown (not just for wlw, but for all queer characters/relationships, while we’re at it.)
Tog:
We have a pretty huge cast of main characters, so you’d think this would be easy, right? Well, you’d think wrong.
Out of the 12 pov characters (Aelin, Dorian, Chaol, Rowan, Sorcha, Aedion, Lysandra, Manon, Elide, Nesryn, Yrene, Lorcan), we get one bi character (Aedion). That’s it. Everyone else is straight.
For side relationships, there are five: Hasar and her gf (whose name I forgot), both only relevant in one book, Darrow (who is villainized) and Aelin’s dead uncle, Emrys and his husband in hof (also only in one book), and Manon’s grandmother (a villain) and her gf (who is mentioned once) and the two witches from Manon’s coven.
Not a good look, right? The only good thing here is that at least the world isn’t homophobic. Still, no one can convince me that this is good rep.
Acotar:
Out of the 12 important characters (Feyre, Elain, Nesta, Rhysand, Azriel, Cassian, Amren, Mor, Tamlin, Lucien, Gwyn, Emerie), we have one wlw character (Mor). Her sexuality is about as badly handled as possible, though, complete with forced coming-out scene, tragic backstory and a bunch of other really unpleasant things. She also has a dead ex-gf, which I personally think could have been handled a lot less Tragic Lesbian-y (what was stopping sjm from just going “Mor and Andromache broke up towards the end of the War, Andromache ended up marrying someone else eventually and was happy with him, everyone parted ways as friends”. Seriously, Mor already HAD a tragic backstory, there was no need for this, especially with wlw characters getting an unhappy ending is already such a trope). Emerie is probably going to be a second wlw character, if that one line about her finding Mor attractive is anything to go by (although sjm could certainly have been more specific there. She had the opportunity for sure.)
For the side characters, we get four more: Helion (bi and is basically written as a collection of Harmful Bi Stereotyopes), Thesan + unnamed male lover (exactly on appearance, the “lover” doesn’t even get dialogue) and Nephelle + unnamed female lover (Nephelle gets one appearance and a bunch of exposition), and possibly two married human queens.
Guys. This is not good rep. It doesn’t help that the world (or at least the NC) is really unnecessarily homophobic abd that (surprise, surprise) isn’t handled well either.
Ccity:
This is more difficult simply by virtue of having only been one book yet. All three main characters (Bryce, Hunt, Ruhn) so far are straight, as are the important relationships.
For side characters, we have Isaiah (who’s gay but hardly plays a role) and Juniper/Fury (who have a total of one scene together and never even TALK to each other on-page).
Conclusion:
Out of the 27 main characters throughout the books, 24 are straight. Out of the three others, only one (Aedion) has a partner as of yet.
There are also 11 queer side-relationships/queer side charcters, none of which have any actual importance to the plot or get any serious amount of page time. 7 of the involved characters aren’t even named. 9 of the pairings don’t get any verbal interaction on page at all (the exceptions being Emrys and his husband (whose name I’m unfortunately unsure about but who actually HAS a name) and Hasar/gf (whose name I also forgot.)(i haven’t read these books in a bit okay. Also, they both only appeared in one book each)). Also keep in mind that these are books where romance is THE MAIN FOCUS. Just think of all the time spent on the cishet relationships I mentioned.
So yeah, this isn’t good rep. There’s no way anyone can argue that this is good rep, or even a lot of rep. (Although it is a lot of BAD rep, since a large part of the rep is bad.)
kinda weird that some people think it's romantic when a 500 year old guy tells a 20-something-year-old woman who has next to no experience with romantic relationships that she can never be with anyone else ngl
Jacques Martin-Ferrieres
I'm still mad that acosf had a whole thing where Nesta was undeserving of her father's love. That is not how parents love is supposed to work. The child doesn't have to earn it.
I expected her to feel extra traumatized because he died before they could reconcile but his deathbed speech of "I loved you since I first held you" doesn't undo everything else he did in his life.
Let children have mixed feelings about their parents. They don't have to worship them for saying i love you (the bare fucking minumum!)
anyway since pride month is coming up and my local barnes and nobey has once again decided to only put young adult books in their corporate mandated rainbow display, y'all want some queer reading recs that aren't YA?
alright gang here we go, one queer-ass book for every day of pride month, plus a lot of bonus recs by extension because most of these authors have written more than one book. remember to buy from bookshop dot org or directly support a local indie by ordering through them 🖤
Queer: A Graphic History (Meg-John Barker) - want a primer on queer theory but don't have the time and money to, you know, take a semester long class on queer theory? might I introduce you to this graphic novel written by nonbinary psychologist Meg-John Barker, who's written several other nonfiction books on gender and sexuality that I can't recommend enough.
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (Becky Chambers) - warm and fuzzy slice of life sci-fi, with lots of cool aliens and travelling between planets. a very queer-friendly universe with lots of exploration of gender and sexuality, plus a cute side romance between a human lady and a kickass lizard woman. all three sequels are hugely recommended, as are Chambers' novellas.
How to Find a Princess (Alyssa Cole) - a Black f/f retelling of Anastasia, featuring a reluctant long-lost princess falling for the investigator tasked with tracking her down and bringing her back to the royal life. I'm told it includes such beloved tropes as fake marriage and only one bed!
In the Vanishers' Palace (Aliette de Bodard) - gorgeous f/f Beauty and the Beast novella, told as a post-apocalyptic story that seamlessly blends science fiction with Vietnamese mythology. a dragon takes a young woman away from her village, intending to have the young woman serve as a tutor for her two young children, and - wait for it - romance ensues.
Black Water Sister (Zen Cho) - a closeted Malaysian lesbian is haunted by her deceased grandmother, a medium who served a mysterious entity called Black Water Sister. grandma has unfinished business with a Shady Corporation, and her granddaughter is going to help her get retribution whether she likes it or not.
This Is How You Lose the Time War (Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone) - a novel that will make you YEARN. following the letters exchanged between assassins Red and Blue, agents on opposite sides of a conflict that stretches across multiple timelines. the two women start as rivals, but become something more to each other very quickly, with absolutely zero chill.
The Death of Vivek Oji (Akwaeke Emezi) - warning up front: as the title suggests, this will not have a happy ending. but the novel offers a touching account of a Nigerian family struggling to make sense of an adult child whose gender and sexual expression baffle them, and the impact of that child's death on the entire community.
Alice Isn't Dead (Joseph Fink) - adapted from the podcast of the same name, this novel follows a Black lesbian trucker with bigtime anxiety as she hits the highways of America to search for Alice, her missing wife. along the way she's going to discover a lot of creepiness, and some skin-crawling conspiracies.
River of Teeth (Sarah Gailey) - absolutely buckwild romp of a novella following an alternate history heist crew of hippopotamus riders, including their bisexual leader and his nonbinary Black demolitions expert love interest.
A Dowry of Blood (S.T. Gibson) - admittedly I haven't read this book yet and don't know a TON about it, but what I DO know is that it's a spin on Dracula that makes the infamous brides a polycule, which is simply fantastic if you ask me.
The Case of the Mysterious Letter (Alexis Hall) - a Sherlock Holmes pastiche following the adventures of one Dr. John Wyndham, a gay trans doctor, and Shaharazad Haas, a freewheeling pansexual sorceress. takes place in a universe full of magic, eldritch horror, and luridly entertaining oddities.
Hunger (Roxane Gay) - not a lighthearted rec, but a truly stirring one. Gay recounts her life as the queer daughter of Haitian immigrants, and how her relationship with food and bodyweight was forever changed by a childhood sexual assault. highly recommended reading for anyone looking to increase their understanding of the violence of fatphobia.
Wow, No Thank You (Samantha Irby) - full disclosure, Irby is one of my personal favorite essayists of all time, but it's well deserved - the bitch is funny. in her third and most recent collection, Irby mines the humor in moving from Chicago to live in a small city (the same city as me, incidentally) with her new wife and two step-children, plus the highs and lows of working on a show like Shrill.
Everyone on the Moon is Essential Personnel (Julian K. Jarboe) - a collection of extremely queer, cyberpunky short stories, heavy on the critique of capitalism. you might know them from this tweet; now support their fiction!
How We Fight For Our Lives (Saeed Jones) - poetic memoir, focused on being a gay Black boy growing up in the south, growing up and moving away from home, complicated maternal relationships, grappling with masculinity.
The House in the Cerulean Sea (T.J. Klune) - the softest m/m romance you ever will see! a nebbish social worker for magical creatures is sent to inspect an unusual orphanage whose occupants include a slime monster and the literal baby antichrist, and inevitable ends up falling for their passionate caregiver. you will cry, reader.
Phoenix Extravagant (Yoon Ha Lee) - a nonbinary artist just trying to mind their own business gets hired to paint magic symbols on enormous dragon mechas, which seems like a pretty sick gig - until they realize they're now complicit in supporting an imperialist war machine. uh oh...
In The Dream House (Carmen Maria Machado) - difficult but absolutely riveting memoir recounting the author's harrowing relationship with an abusive girlfriend. also check out her collection of creepy short stories, Her Body and Other Parties.
Winter's Orbit (Everina Maxwell) - m/m space opera romance, including: political intrigue! murder! arranged marriage! begrudgingly working together with your new spouse to solve a murder so that you don't take the blame for it! and... MORE!
One Last Stop (Casey McQuiston) - new release alert! a young woman moves to New York, develops a crush on a hot lesbian on the subway, and then finds out that lesbian is actually a displaced time traveler from the 70s. hot damn!
She Who Became the Sun (Shelley Parker-Chan) - a historical fantasy retelling the founding of the Ming Dynasty, following an ambitious child who enrolls in a monastery to pass as a male monk. sounds like your typical Mulan-style "cis girl pretending to be a boy," but Parker-Chan says the protagonist doesn't strictly identity as female and that they consider her to be genderqueer.
Feed (Tommy Pico) - epic poetry (the whole book is one long poem bro it never ends) by a Kumeyaay writer, with a focus on reconnecting with lost culture through shared meals and food so evocative that it made me learn to cook.
Witchmark (C.L. Polk) - you guys, this one has everything! a gay man on the run from his influential family, a hot love interest who needs him to help solve a dramatic murder, exploration of magic-based social inequality, critiques of imperialist war, and chase scenes that take place on bikes. the sequels, Stormsong and Starsoul, are equally queer and lean even more heavily into themes of radical social reform.
Sorrowland (Rivers Solomon) - a young queer Black woman escapes from an isolated cult and tries to live a peaceful life in the woods with her twin children - only to discover she's developing some pretty fucked up superpowers.
The Jasmine Throne (Tasha Suri) - you might have seen me mention this one as part of my Hot Book Summer, since it's an upcoming June release! do you like epic fantasy, f/f romance, and princesses working together with secret priestesses to topple empires? oh BOY, then do I have a book for you!
Fierce Femmes and Notorious Liars: A Dangerous Trans Girl's Confabulous Memoir (Kai Cheng Thom) - modern fairy tale about a teenage martial arts prodigy who runs away from home, joins a vigilante street gang to protect trans sex workers (!!!), and finds herself™ along the way.
Space Opera (Catherynne M. Valente) - okay, so you know Eurovision? great, now take Eurovision and put it in space and if Earth loses our whole planet is going to get blown up, and our only hope is a washed up queer singer from a punk band that hasn't been cool for years. good luck!
Dear America: Notes From an Undocumented Citizen (Jose Antonio Vargas) - an excellent memoir from gay journalist and immigration rights activist! Vargas recounts coming to America from the Philippines as a young child, growing up unaware that he had entered the United States without documentation, and the community that helped him in the uphill struggle to live a visible public life as a writer.
The Chosen and the Beautiful (Nghi Vo) - remember Jordan Baker from The Great Gatsby, and how she was definitely a lesbian? Vo says not only is Jordan queer, she's also an Asian-American adopted into a wealthy white family and she has magic powers.
The Collected Schizophrenias (Esmé Weijun Wang) - a truly stirring memoir, written by the first-generation bisexual daughter of Taiwanese immigrants. Wang writes with gut-wrenching beauty about her diagnosis, the way her family endeavored to keep their history with mental health problems under wraps, and her struggles through higher education and institutionalizations.
alright fuck it, 20 more! happy pride!
Common Bonds (edited by Claudie Arsenault, C.T. Callahan, B.R. Sanders, and RoAnna Sylver) - an upcoming anthology of stories centering aromantics.
The Natural Mother of the Child: A Memoir of Nonbinary Parenthood (Krys Malcolm Belc) - it's exactly what it sounds like, babey! a recent memoir by a nonbinary individual about the experience of carrying out a pregnancy and giving birth to a child.
¡Hola Papi! How to Come Out in a Walmart Parking Lot and Other Life Lessons (John Paul Brammer) - if you aren't already reading John Paul Brammer's hilarious, heartfelt, and self-proclaimed "deranged" advice column, checking out this freshly published collection is a great place to start.
Ace: What Asexuality Reveals About Desire, Society, and the Meaning of Sex (Angela Chen) - one of my favorite pieces of recent queer nonfiction, following the writer's acceptance of her own asexuality as she navigates the stereotypes and stigma that plague the ace community.
Finna (Nino Cipri) - a buckwild novella about a pair of coworkers who a.) just broke up and b.) have to go on an adventure to find a lost customer in an interdimensional furniture store.
The Unbroken (C.L. Clark) - if the first list didn't include enough anti-empire queer fiction for you, here's another one in which a princess and female soldier forge a fragile alliance while working opposite sides of society to end a war.
Gender Euphoria: Stories of Joy from Trans, Nonbinary and Intersex Writers (edited Laura Kate Dale) - compiled by trans lesbian and video game journalist Laura Kate Dale, enjoy this collection of euphoric stories from folks all over the gender spectrum.
Hunger Pangs (Joy Demorra) - more queer vampires, folks! in this one, a dashing captain is assigned to an island full of vampires and finds himself with some Feelings about, and I quote, "the local vampire dandy lord." a nice touch is that you can choose to purchase the book with or without sex scenes included!
The Traitor Baru Cormorant (Seth Dickinson) - more anti-empire fic, following a queer girl with a prodigious gift for numbers seeking to destroy the empire that colonized her homeland and killed one of her fathers from the inside out, by burying herself among its highest-ranking officials.
Bingo Love (Tee Franklin) - SUPER cute comic series about an elderly interracial lesbian couple, tracking their relationship through decades :)
Star Eater (Kerstin Hall) - okay so we have (checks notes) a lesbian taking out an order of cannibal nuns? cool!
Burning Roses (S.L. Huang) - a fairytale reimagining that throws Little Red Riding Hood and Hou Yi, a legendary Chinese archer, together as a pair of crotchety, aging queer women who have to come together to slay the monsters ravaging their country.
The Thirty Names of Night (Zeyn Joukhadar) - a contemporary novel about a closeted young trans man from a Syrian American family trying to solve the mystery of his mother's death, and what is has to do with the journal of a mysterious woman who painted rare birds.
No Man of Woman Born (Rewoven Tales) (Ana Mardoll) - I'm just gonna quote the blurb directly from the author's website, because it slaps ass: "a collection of seven fantasy stories in which transgender and nonbinary characters subvert and fulfill gendered prophecies."
Luisa: Now and Then (Carole Maurel and Mariko Tamaki) - a graphic novel in which 32 year old struggling photographer Luisa encounters her 15 year old self and struggles to deal with her past, while also grappling with her attraction to a female neighbor.
Skye Falling (Mia McKenzie) - a middle aged queer woman who's spent her life going it alone is contacted by the 12 year old child who was born from an egg she donated in her 20s, kicking off a complicated contemporary story about family.
Little Fish (Casey Plett) - a trans woman discovers that her grandfather - a dead and deeply conservative Mennonite - may have also been transgender, and goes looking for the pieces of his life while she and her own friends grapple with addiction, sex work, and mental illness.
Glitter + Ashes: Queer Tales of a World that Wouldn't Die (edited by Dave Ring) - an anthology from Neon Hemlock, focused on tales of queer folk surviving various ends of the world against all odds. features C.L. Clark, who's also included on this very list, and countless other incredible talents.
Jonny Appleseed (Joshua Whitehead) - a two-spirit sex worker and self-described "glitter princess" is called back home for his stepfather's funeral, and spends a whirlwind week navigating how to walk the line between his life in the big city and the reservation.
The Black Tides of Heaven (Neon Yang) - okay let's have one more regime-toppling story: the queer man with a dictatorial mother and a highly praised twin sister begins to pull away from his family's rule, and finds himself torn between them and a growing rebelling.
oh look, here are a load more recommendations from Fantasy Hive with hardly any overlap with titles already on this list:
Happy Pride Month! To celebrate, we recommend 5-Star Books in 5 Words that have LGBTQA+ authors and/or characters!
fantasy isn't really your thing? no worries, here's an even longer list from the Rumpus with everything from contemporary fiction to poetry to memoirs.
Rumpus editors share a list of new and forthcoming books to celebrate Pride Month!
hold up, did you want romance? BookPage has your new queer romance recs right here.
These queer romances have the perfect balance between sweet love stories and substantial issues like grief and class.
I haven't read How to Find a Princess but I have read other Alyssa Cole books and she's an incredible writer! I have read Winter's Orbit and it's AMAZING!
Am I adding all of these books to my TBR? possibly... (Hunger Pangs is already on it I love Joy)
There are all sorts of angels. Which one are you? Details of painted wings. (The first one is digital art.)
AMITA SUMAN Bulgari: Magnificient Jewellery collection “Opera d’Arte”
the beach made things feel better 🌊