she could definitely convince me to look outside. it wouldn't be difficult

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Türkiye

seen from T1

seen from Canada
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Uruguay
seen from Australia
seen from Brazil

seen from Australia
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Canada
she could definitely convince me to look outside. it wouldn't be difficult
Happy trans awareness week! Allow me to make you aware of these trans bisexuals
Books listed:
Hugged by Verity Ritchie
Make Room for Love by Darcy Liao
Minuet by A.M. Leibowitz
The Anonymous Letters of C Forestier by Felicia Davin
Foxhunt (Foxhunt, #1) by Rem Wigmore
The Flowered Blade by Taylor Hubbard
Homegrown Magic by Jamie Pacton and Becca Podos
How to Survive a Slasher by Justine Pucella Winans
Do you know this (implied) bisexual character?
Aymeric de Borel from Final Fantasy XIV (game)
Yeah, I know him!
I've heard of him
I don't know him
Propaganda:
in a better world cristina and teddy would have both ditched hunt and rode of together into the sunset
🦋 M: "I'm so glad you're my partner in crime"
C: "As long as you're my partner in time."
~ missing them hours 🥹 That's my favorite line out of them 💙
My rating for this book is 4/5 Stars
This story was a very sweet, well-written romance with believable characters and obstacles in their way. Two biromantic/bisexual young women fell in love when they met at an Armenian neighborhood center in San Francisco as they attended Armenian cultural events together.
The story was all told from the first person point of view of Nareh whose long time boyfriend proposed to her at the beginning, but she never agreed. He went away and she told her mother she would attempt to meet an Armenian man. Instead, she met and fell for another Armenian woman. They shared some steamy and sweet kisses, one short smut scene and woke up in bed together a few times.
The story showcased Armenian food, dancing, religion, witchcraft and the occult and the Armenian genocide and its continued significance today.
Some of the harder parts of the book: A lot of internalized homophobia / biphobia for Nareh and external homophobia from Nareh's family, forced public outing that Nareh denied, Nareh being unsure if she should be with a man or the woman she fell for, a hostile work environment for Nareh, the major conflict being resolved very quickly.
Evan Buckley you big beautiful himbo
It's okay he's smart in other ways 😭💜
What. The. Fuck. Holy shit, this was so good but also, what the actual fuck? My flabbers are gasted. I loved the creeping sense of dread through the whole book. And the sinister way that the forest slowly crept into every aspect of Andrew and Thomas’ lives? Incredible! Andrew’s struggle with anxiety through the whole book felt so incredibly real. And the thing that I loved the most was Andrew being unapologetically asexual. He was also so incredibly real for his crash out after coming out to Thomas. Honestly, this was one of the most “what the fuck, Andrew?” books I’ve read in a while. Don’t Let The Forest In is getting five stars from me. I need to go stare at a wall for a while and process what I read…. O_O