Allysse reviews Burning Bright by Melissa Scott

Burning Bright is a story about power struggle set in a science-fiction universe in which two different races co-exist – the Human and the Hsai – but are battling for power. Burning Bright is the name of the planet in which pilot Quinn Lioe docks her ship for repairs which makes her spend a few days on the planet. This planet is an important commercial link between the Human Republic and the Hsai Empire, but it is also a centre of activity for the Game. Lioe is a designer of scenarios for this Game and is aiming to spend her few days on the planet to launch her newest one. However her interest in the Game soon involves her in the power struggle that is happening between Humans and Hsai.

The plot of the novel is complex and the author takes the time to settle the characters, the places, and the plots. At the beginning we feel all the characters are connected via one another but we can’t quite see how they are all going to move towards the same point. The novel being science-fiction the author has to explain to the reader all the aspects of the world she creates and Melissa Scott does it very well. All the explanations come from the thoughts and actions of the characters and nothing feels forced on the reader. We gather all the information we need from the characters at the same time than the plots moves forward. Nothing ever feels unnecessary and we dive easily into the world created by Melissa Scott. We slowly discover the game of power and the role of the different characters and as we turn the pages everything falls into its right place making the picture clear for the reader. It is a very gripping book. Once you start reading it you want to know more, you want to discover who’s who and who does what and why. This is another strong point of the novel: its characters. All the main characters are fully developed and have complex personalities. They are not black and white with a single motivation to do good or evil. They are shades of grey, with a past that has modelled them towards a future they are trying to build for themselves. Some of the characters become caught in the plot without wanting to and Melissa Scott transcribes very well their reactions and feelings.

So far I haven’t talked about why I picked this novel to review for The Lesbrary. In the author’s world, the characters have fluid sexuality. It’s not something that is questioned or even important, they just sometimes fall in love with men or with women and it’s just the same. In regards to The Lesbrary, the pilot Quinn Lioe has an affair with the docker and gamer Roscha. I liked the reality of their story which begins as a one night stand but evolves into something more complicated as the story goes on. I especially liked the subtle treatment given to it by the author which made their story feels very real. The only point I didn’t understand well was their love scene. It’s not that it was badly written but it felt unnecessary. Every scene of the novel brings information to the reader about the world, the plot, or the characters but this scene didn’t bring any useful information at all. I think the scene could have been cut and the story wouldn’t have suffered for it. But that’s really my only negative point about the book.

In her novel Melissa Scott succeeds in creating very interesting and deep characters as well as a very intriguing plot, in a rich and complex setting, that goes at a pace that keeps the reader hooked to her words. This is a very good read and I would highly recommend it.

Weekly Link Round Up

AfterEllen posted “Batwoman #1” is here, she’s queer, and we could get used to it and a link round up with the extended American Girl with the Dragon Tattoo trailer as well as info on Ellen DeGeneres’s new book.

Autostraddle posted

Elisa posted

Good Lesbian Books posted

Lambda Literary posted

Loving Venus – Loving Mars posted Guest Author Post – The Allure of Vampires in Romance Literature by Paisley Smith.

Readings in Lesbian and Bisexual Women’s Fiction posted Readings with Julie Enszer.

Shelly’s LGBT Book Review Blog posted Top Ten Non-Fiction Books for Gay / Queer Teenagers

S. Bear Bergman has a new website!

Ivan Coyote will be in Melbourne, Australia May 17th-19th for a three night run of a solo show.

Cassandra Duffy was interviewed at Bibrary Book Lust.

Clifford Henderson posted about non-romance lesbian fiction.

Lori Lake was interviewed at Women and Words.

Malinda Lo posted

Marianne K Martin, author, and co-founder of Bywater Books, was interviewed at Novelists, Inc.

Sara Ryan, author of Empress of the World was written about at I’m Here. I’m Queer. What the Hell Do I Read?

Michelle Tea participated in a “Hot Authors” photoshoot for canteen mag.

Alice Walker is having several of her books published as ebooks, including The Color Purple.

“Looking For LGBTQ Speculative Fiction? Book Bloggers Can Help!” was posted at Book Blogger Appreciation Week.

Sappho International by Max Amillion was reviewed at Bibrary Book Lust.

Hit by a Farm: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Barn by Catherine Friend was reviewed at Shelly’s LGBT Book Review Blog.

Hidden Truths by Jae was reviewed at Bosom Friends: Lesbian Historical Fiction.

Smoketown by Tenea D. Johnson was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

Finders Keepers by Karin Kallmaker was reviewed at Good Lesbian Books.

Night Vision by Karin Kallmaker was reviewed at Good Lesbian Books.

Carmilla by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu was reviewed at Good Lesbian Books.

Happy Accidents by Jane Lynch was reviewed at AfterEllen.

Trick of the Dark by Val McDermid was reviewed at Out in Print Queer Book Review.

Jericho by Ann McMan was reviewed at Jae’s Fiction.

365 Days by KE Payne was reviewed at QueerYA.

I Kissed a Girl II: More Virgin Lesbian Stories edited by Regina Perry was reviewed at BlackRaven’s Reviews.

Branded Ann by Merry Shannon was reviewed at Good Lesbian Books.

My West: Personal Writings on the American West — Past, Present and Future by Patricia Nell Warren was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters was written about at Writinghood.

Love Spell by Karen Williams was reviewed at Friend of Dorothy Wilde.

Roses & Thorns – Beauty and the Beast Retold by Chris Anne Wolfe was reviewed at Good Lesbian Books.

Kristi reviews The Collectors by Lesley Gowan

Laura has a passion for collecting BDSM lesbian erotica. That passion also extends to her fantasy of becoming a real submissive. She never believed there was a way to translate her desires into real life, until her classmate Adele introduces Laura to her mistress, Jeanne. Laura finds herself a willing, if inquisitive, submissive to Jeanne and is transported to to a new level of sensual bondage, both emotional and physical. Yet while Jeanne shares Laura’s passions for art and sex, Adele is not willing to share her mistress with Laura. As Adele’s jealousy and anger spread through Jeanne’s organization, can Laura find a secure place in this erotic world?

Lesley Gowan’s The Collectors has a good premise: a fantasy-turned-reality erotic relationship. Laura desires the worlds she reads about in her BDSM erotica, and when she finds a way to meet a real mistress through her friend Adele, she takes her up on it and never really looks back. Driven by desire for a dominant, and for Jeanne herself, Laura insinuates herself between Adele and Jeanne as she accepts more and more advanced instruction.

This is the point where I start to fall out of the story. While Laura is an obvious novice, her incessant inquires about process and questions to Jeanne about their relationship are enough to strain the credibility of the storyline, even with the punishments she endures as a result. As a reader of other BDSM-focused writing (I appreciate the reference to Califa’s Macho Sluts, as it was one of my first), I cannot conceive of many dominants allowing this to go on for the amount of time it does in this book. The sex scenes varied between borderline erotic to superficial in description and tone, and that forced me out of the book as well. On top of this, the ending seemed to come out of nowhere, shifting the focus from Laura and her entrance into this world to Jeanne and her administrative struggles.

While I struggled with aspects of the story, Gowan does shine light on one woman’s personal journey into BDSM. Those who can ignore the flaws may find this a good read, but readers looking for immersion into the journey will find it lacking.

Laura Mandanas reviews “Gigglepuss” by Giselle Renarde

I have to say: I was a bit concerned when, four paragraphs in, the main love interest was characterized as a “Japanese anime schoolgirl.” (Like, really people. Can we just stop with the racist Asian exotification and extraordinarily sleazy fetishization of teenage girls? That would be great.) Normally I would have stopped reading there, but with Lesbrary readers in mind, I continued on. Luckily, it wasn’t as bad as I expected; as it turns out, Mitsuki is 20, and Asian “othering” is actually mildly poked fun at in this story. So, yay for that. You’re free to read “Gigglepuss” by Giselle Renarde with a clear conscience.

Unfortunately, not having the above information, I found myself entirely unable to get into it on my first read through. By the time I got to the story’s climax, there just… was none. Stereotyping is super unsexy in my book, and though this one redeemed itself by the end, the initial turnoff was overpowering. Despite this, the engaging and cheerfully explicit writing eventually won me over – it just took some time. I quite enjoyed the story on my second read through a couple weeks later. So take that as you will.

Without giving too much away, “Gigglepuss” is an erotic romance about two queer women in a small town. It is not a love story, and it is not a lengthy dissertation with laboriously developed characters. It is short, sexy, and doesn’t take itself too seriously – which feels appropriate, coming from an author who began writing erotica on a dare.

The main highlight of the story for me was the main character: a sweet-talking lady-killer named Lorna. (Think Shane  from The L Word in print form.) I mean, that, of course, and the sex. Always the sex. Even when the occasionally overenthusiastic descriptions made me giggle.

 “Gigglepuss” is available to download for $1.49 at All Romance.

Danika reviews The Gifted Ones by Lisa Vaughn

I think I might be a little burnt out on self-published books.

The problem is that I always have the same problems with them, and almost all of those problems can be summed up with “not enough editing.” The Gifted Ones (a memoir), unfortunately, fits in that category. The typos are numerous, including two ones that I noticed repeating. The first is mistaking “of” for “have” (“should of” “could of” “Wouldn’t Peggy of been proud?” (pg 171)), and the second was “towing the line.” There was also a lot of unnecessary emphasis (lots of bolding, underlining, italics, all caps).

I don’t want to say it was all bad, however. I really think it has potential. I found the childhood part slow, but the story after that is compelling.

I think I might be able to be a little more coherent in point form.

Positives:

  • I really think there is enough action for a novel-length story. Everyone thinks their life story is interesting, but not everyone actually has enough happen to fill a whole book.
  • I loved the budding romance. It seemed very natural. I also thought the first kiss was memorable. The scene was striking.
  • [spoilers] I was impressed that Vaughn gave her romance with Selina the weight she did, considering it one of the two true loves of her life, not just a passing fling on the way to heterosexualville. I really appreciated that. [end spoilers] 

Negatives

  • It’s a lot like reading a diary, but without the immediacy. I really would have liked to see a little more of a critical eye instead of just detailing what happened, how she felt at the time, and the occasional speculation.
  • A lot of things are over-explained (but that’s my pet peeve in books, so it may just be me).
  • Swearing in dialogue between teens makes perfect sense, but having it in the narration was odd. Again, it’s somewhere between being a first-person, in-the-moment account and a more reflective account with the knowledge gained over time. It don’t quite achieve either, which makes it awkward.
  • The word “retard” is used, again, not just in dialogue, which is understandable in the 70s, but uncritically in the narration, which really made me cringe. It happens more than once.
  • There is some heavy-handed foreshadowing (something like “But we had no idea how bad it would get!” at the end of a chapter).
  • Her childhood, which was pretty typical, got a lot of space and detail, but [spoilers] her engagement and marriage was summed up in a few paragraphs tacked on to the end. [end spoilers] There didn’t seem to be a coherent conclusion, which made me wonder what the focus of the memoir was.

Oddly, I think if this had simply been her diaries from the time, I probably would have enjoyed it more, because I love reading diaries and journals, but it wasn’t quite as immediate as that, or as critical as I would like out of a memoir.

Overall, Vaughn’s romance is compelling, and her later partying lifestyle–as well as dealing with anti-gay bigotry in the 70s and 80s–is more than enough material to form a great story, but The Gifted Ones just needed far more editing to achieve that, including paring it down so that it had a clear goal.

How running the Lesbrary has changed my reading habits.

So, I just saw the BBAW topic for today is how book blogging has changed your reading habits, and even though I’m not going to be blogging all the topics, this one intrigued me.

Running the Lesbrary has completely transformed my reading habits. I’m not sure if I started the Lesbrary because I was reading more lesbian books, or I started reading more lesbian books because of the Lesbrary, but either way, it’s been a huge increase. I used pick up lesbian books whenever I could, but the vast majority of my books and the books I read were straight. Now I have a whole bookcase of unread lesbian books (that are slowly spilling onto the floor), a stack of lesbian books by my bed to review (I’ll get to them, I promise!), and an ereader packed with them.

That’s another thing! I hadn’t read any ebooks or self-published books before the Lesbrary. In fact, I bought my ereader specifically in order to read the ebooks the Lesbrary is sent. And I read self-published books and ebooks frequently.

I’m back at school now, and as an English major, I’m sticking to just course reading at the moment, but outside of school I now hardly read any nonqueer books! Ideally, I’d like it to be about 50/50, but I have so many to review that I feel like I can’t justify reading a straight book. It’s definitely been a huge change for me.

Have you noticed a change in your reading since following book blogs? (Especially queer ones?)

Link Round Up, Part 3 (all caught up!)

Autostraddle posted Autostraddle Summer Book Club Final Winners Announced!

Elisa posted Rainbow Awards: Current Submissions 191-200 and Rainbow Awards: Cover Contest – Round 1 – Finalists.

F/F Fan Fiction Reader’s Corner posted What Women Want.

Gay League posted Gay Previews 10/11.

GLBT Reading posted September Reviews, so go link your queer book review posts there! They also posted Reading challenge update: Most active contributers.

I’m Here. I’m Queer. What the Hell Do I Read? posted

Lambda Literary posted

Lesbian Fiction Readers Choice Awards is now accepting nominations!

 

Lesbilicious also commented on the Lambda Literary Awards’ new criteria.

Queer for Theory posted about the “sad girls holding hands” problem in lesbian YA lit.

QueerType posted September Publishing Notes, which is very thorough and I highly recommend reading.

Read These Lips has posted volume five (free ebook!)

Shelly’s LGBT Book Review Blog posted Fiction Monday – Lesbian Romance AND Mystery – Gerri Hill.

Women and Words posted a video with Carsen Taite about what events are happening with Bold Strokes Books authors in the near future and Don’t read comics? Batwoman could change your mind…

Sarah Diemer had a section of her book The Dark Wife read aloud at The Way of the Buffalo.

Alison Bechdel

Malinda Lo posted

Jane Lynch did a book trailer for her memoir, Happy Accidents. The trailer is pretty cheesy, but at least you’re aware of her memoir now!

Rachel Spangler posted the cover of her new release, LoveLife.

A.J. Walkley was interviewed at Mahalo.com.

A Woman Of Heart by Marcy Alancraig was reviewed at Kissed By Venus.

Damaged in Service by Barrett was reviewed at Jae’s Fiction.

Rainey Nights by R. E. Bradshaw was reviewed at Dogz Blogz.

Brooklyn Burning by Steve Brezenoff was reviewed at Forever Young Adult.

Tilting at Windmills by Geonn Cannon was reviewed at Piercing Fiction.

Renegade by Cheyne Curry was reviewed at Bosom Friends: Lesbian Historical Fiction.

Keeper of the Piece by Lesley Davis was reviewed at Jae’s Fiction.

Kissing the Witch by Emma Donoghue was reviewed at Wildmoo Books.

Reluctant Hope by Erin Dutton was reviewed at Jae’s Fiction.

Annie On My Mind by Nancy Garden was reviewed by Malinda Lo. It has a different take, and also has the original cover, which I hadn’t seen before!

Storms by Gerri Hill was reviewed at Jae’s Fiction.

Just Like That by Karin Kallmaker was reviewed at Jae’s Fiction.

Strange Bedfellows by Q. Kelly was reviewed at Jae’s Fiction.

Like Lovers Do by Lori Lake was reviewed at Piercing Fiction.

Is It a Choice? Answers to the Most Frequently Asked Questions About Gay & Lesbian People by Eric Marcus was reviewed at Shelly’s LGBT Book Review Blog.

Wild by Meghan O’Brien was reviewed at  Jae’s Fiction.

Firestorm by Radclyffe was reviewed at Jae’s Fiction.

Water Mark, a Micky Knight Mystery by J.M. Redmann was reviewed at Shelly’s LGBT Book Review Blog.

Women of the Mean Streets edited by J.M. Redmann & Greg Herren was reviewed at Bonjour, Cass!

If the Wind Were a Woman by Kelly Sinclair was reviewed at Piercing Fiction: Straight Arrow Reviews.

Sometimes She Lets Me: Best Butch/Femme Erotica edited by Tristan Taormino was reviewed at Kissed By Venus.

Hellebore & Rue: Tales of Queer Women and Magic edited by Joselle Vanderhooft and Catherine Lundoff was reviewed at Kissed By Venus.

Tipping the Velvet by Sarah Waters was reviewed at Bosom Friends: Lesbian Historical  Fiction.

Forbidden Passions by M.J. Williamz was reviewed at The Rainbow Reader.

Shadows of Aggar by Chris Anne Wolfe was reviewed at The Rainbow Reader.

Mfred reviews Valencia by Michelle Tea

What to say about this book?  I can’t quite put my finger on Valencia, can’t pin it down or summarize my reaction to it.

Perhaps my first mistake was to read the introduction.  My copy is a reprint, with Tea adding commentary on her own ambivalent feelings regarding the semi-autobiographical story of being young, queer, drunk and high, in love, broken-hearted, hungover, penniless, jobless, restless, in San Francisco.  Starting the book with that strong sense of ambivalence may have colored my reading of it.

Each chapter in the novel is a new girl, or a new party, or a new job, told explicitly and graphically, in stream-of-consciousness style.  Sometimes the story blazes and sometimes it falters.  Sometimes it even dawdles and loses the thread completely.  By the end, it becomes quite lyrical and emotive, and I felt drawn to Tea’s narrator where she had annoyed and alienated previously.  But I was also angry!  Why was all this beauty confined to the very last chapter of the book?!

Published in 2000, I’m not sure the book has the same impact today.  Would it win awards or receive so much praise if written in 2011?  There have been quite a few “women-on-the-verge” confessional-style memoirs and stories since the late 90s/early 2000s — maybe this one stands out for being Capital-Q Queer?  But reading it, I was even reminded of books by Kerouac and Diane DiPrima.  In this sense, Tea’s explicitness when detailing all of the the sex, drugs, and aimlessness of her life, felt stale.

Or, maybe it’s me?  Maybe if I was younger and less settled in my life, Tea’s meanderings between girlfriends and emotional crises would have resonated more.  One thing I can say for Michelle Tea, I was not indifferent to her writing.

It took until page 164 for me to find a passage that I truly liked:

As long as I was able to keep my mind from my heart, it seemed like a pretty cool situation. Brave and exciting. But my heart was a whirling, starving void that sucked and sucked like a terrible black hole, and when it gobbled up my logic it made what I was doing look lonely, and sleazy. I laced my Docs and grabbed my leather jacket.

Link Round Up, Part 2

This post catches us up with August! By Wednesday I will be all caught up again.

Autostraddle posted The Pop-Up Museum of Queer History, With A Side of RADCLYFFE.

Good Lesbian Books posted Lesbian Fairytale Fiction.

Indie Lit Awards are now accepting nominations for the LGBTQ category! (Oh, and the categories, too.) Go nominate your favourite 2011 LGBTQ books! This year, you don’t need to be a book blogger to nominate! I’ll be one of the judges, so I’d really appreciate you nominating (at least) one!

Kissed By Venus posted The Venus Magazine Short Fiction Contest.

Lambda Literary posted

When Rachel Returns by Balticbard was reviewed at Piercing Fiction: Straight Arrow Reviews.

The Girls Club by Sally Bellerose was reviewed at Out in Print Queer Book Review.

Under the Big Montana Sky by Jillian Carole was reviewed at Piercing Fiction: Straight Arrow Reviews.

The Illusionist, Book 1 by Fran Heckrotte was reviewed at Piercing Fiction: Straight Arrow Reviews.

The Skin Beneath by Nairne Holtz was reviewed at Piercing Fiction: Straight Arrow Reviews.

Shaken and Stirred by Joan Opyr was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

Fearless by Erin O’Reilly was reviewed The Rainbow Reader.

Taking My Life by Jane Rule was reviewed at Xtra!

The Night Watch by Sarah Waters was reviewed at things she read.

Zipper Mouth by Laurie Weeks was reviewed at Autostraddle.

Then Came You by Jennifer Weiner was reviewed at Literally Lesbian Review.

Weekly…ish (who am I kidding) Link Round Up!

Well, school has started, and somewhat predictably I’ve fallen behind in link round ups. This will bring us up until Aug 26th (that’s it?!), and I hope to do another week (ideally two) tomorrow.

Bold Strokes Books posted Going Evil: Keeping Romance Alive in Series Writing.

Elisa posted Rainbow Awards: Current Submissions 171-180 and Del Martin (May 5, 1921 – August 27, 2008) and Phyllis Lyon (born November 10, 1924).

Kissed By Venus posted about their new design.

Lambda Literary posted

Little Sister’s Book and Art Emporium posted Little Sister’s vs Big Brother (screening).

Rhiannon Argo, author of Creamsicle, was interviewed at Queeries Mag.

I. Beacham was interviewed by Rebecca S. Buck at Left Lion.

Baxter Clare posted Kissed by Venus, A Love Letter to the Editor and Fact or Fiction?

Ivan Coyote posted her newest article at Xtra! and made it onto the shortlist for Short Fiction in the ReLit Awards.

Cathy Pegau, author of Rulebreaker, was reviewed at Loving Venus-Loving Mars.

Haruki Murakami’s Norwegian Wood has been challenged in New Jersey. 

London’s gay bookstore, Gay’s the Word, was vandalized.

 

Toronto librarians talk about the importance of LGBT (and aboriginal) special collections.

Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel was reviewed at Shelly’s

 LGBT Book Review Blog.

Speaking Out edited by Steve Berman was reviewed at Out In Print Queer Book Review.

Rainey Days by R. E. Bradshaw was reviewed by Baxter Clare.

Ghosts of Winter by Rebecca S. Buck was reviewed by Baxter Clare.

River Walker by Cate Culpepper was reviewed at Kissed By Venus.

Best of Both edited by Miranda Forbes was reviewed at Three Dollar Bill Reviews.

Annie On My Mind by Nancy Garden was reviewed at Silly Little Mischief.

Like Lovers Do by Lori L. Lake was reviewed at Gay/Lesbian Fiction Book Reviews.

Ash by Malinda Lo was reviewed at Forever Young Adult.

Moving Pieces by Emily Maroutian was reviewed at The Rainbow Reader.

“Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence” by Adrienne Rich was reviewed at the feminist librarian.

No Rules of Engagement by Tracey Richardson was reviewed by Baxter Clare.

Moonglow by Charlie Romo was reviewed at Bibrary Book Lust.

The Woman Who Wouldn’t Shake Hands by Chocolate Waters was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

Tipping the Velvet by Sarah Waters has its cover reviewed at Page Pulp.

Bad Wife Spankings by Valerie Wetlaufer was reviewed at Lambda Literary.