Maryam reviews Best Lesbian Erotica 2012

After a frustrating, busy week, I decided to relax with Best Lesbian Erotica 2012.  It definitely put me in a better mood – the collection starts off strong with Amy Butcher’s ‘Touched’.  I’m a sucker for a schoolgirl, so this little vignette was a delight. As a whole, Best Lesbian Erotica offers more hits than misses, although for me personally it went downhill after D.L. King’s ‘On My Honor’, one of the sexiest, most enjoyable stories in the book.  I didn’t care for the stories that were written in second-person narrative – to be quite honest, I find it more difficult to get into the story with second-person perspective.  Of all the stories, I thought that ‘Touched’, ‘Rebel Girl’, ‘Blood Lust’, ‘Maid For You’, and ‘On My Honor’ really shone. ‘How He Likes It’ I could have done without; it seemed too far removed from lesbian erotica to actually be lesbian erotica – without the details, I could have just been reading a straight S&M story. Queer erotica, yes – lesbian erotica, not so much? All in all, I think there is something for everyone inBest Lesbian Erotica 2012 – a little romance, a little S&M, a little uniform play, and a lot of great authors and great, hot sex writing.

Jasper reviews Shadow Swans

“Den’s azure eyes betrayed unfathomable tombs of fury and sadness.”
“They feared the rogue warrior they perceived to be growing inside me.”
“Anxious to coddle her kinetic sweetness, I submitted to the secrecy…”
“We were all, by now, wet like kittens tossed in the ocean.”

I’m surprised I made it through Laura Thomas’s Shadow Swans, a coming-of-age novel about a rich young malcontent who makes friends with a homeless girl living in New York City’s subway tunnels. Thomas’s main character, Ruby, speaks with the self-absorbed voice of someone who has yet to realize that suffering and apathy are neither unique nor artistic. Ruby’s first-person narration crams in unnecessary similes, adjectives, and adverbs in a style that I at first thought was satirical. She skateboards around New York City, rides on the top of taxicabs, and waxes ineloquent on the vapidity of human beings, all while living in an abandoned apartment because it’s more real than living somewhere where she has to pay rent. It takes meeting the tunnel-dwelling Den (short for Credenza) to make Ruby realize that ostracizing yourself because you think it sets you above the common herd isn’t quite the same as genuinely struggling on the outskirts of society–and even that realization doesn’t shift her narrative voice away from overwrought self-involvement.

But in spite of the purple prose and predictable young-person-comes-of-age-with-the-help-of-eccentric-friends-and-drugs-and-realizing-actions-have-consequences plot, there’s a decent story buried in Shadow Swans. It just needs help to get out. That story’s about respecting other people’s boundaries and about the selfishness of trying to push someone from a life very different from your own to “grow.” Sometimes, people push others because it makes them feel special to be the teacher, the knowledge-bringer, and pushing for selfish reasons often hurts others more than it helps. Parts of Shadow Swans are about that. Parts of it are also about falling in love with a friend, and not being certain what that means or how it changes a relationship. Both parts, if they were couched in firmer writing, pacing, plot, and character development, would make Shadow Swans worth reading. At 99 cents for the ebook, it may still be worth reading, if you’re looking for a cheap reading fix. If you’re tight on time and money, though, I’d wait until Thomas writes another book, or develops this one further.

Allysse reviews Hellebore & Rue: Tales of Queer Women and Magic edited by JoSelle Vanderhooft and Catherine Lundoff


Hellebore & Rue: Tales of Queer Women and Magic
Edited by JoSelle Vanderhooft and Catherine Lundoff

This anthology has previously been reviewed by Danika. It is one of the reason that drove me to read it. The other reason, as for Danika, was the cover.

I agree with everything she wrote in her review. The anthology is a collection of really well-written short stories which are able to establish a world and an atmosphere in the short span of pages they have to exist.

I plunged into the anthology with high expectations and I have never been disappointed. All the stories appealed to me and got me hooked from their very first words. There was a nice variety of genres and styles but not of quality. All the stories were good. I would definitely recommend this anthology to anyone and not just to a lesbian audience. Like Danika mentioned the stories are not about being lesbians, they are just fantasy short stories with characters who happens to be lesbians ,and most of the time it isn’t relevant to the story.

If you like fantasy, short stories with an added bonus of lesbians I would highly recommend you read this book. And if you like fantasy and short stories I would also highly recommend it.

JoSelle Vanderhooft and Catherine Lundoff did an excellent job with editing the book. I’ve previously read Steam-Powered 2: More Lesbian Steampunk Stories edited by them which was also of very high quality. After reading those two anthologies I am now definitely keeping an eye on whatever they will edit in the future.

Link Round Up

      

Bella Books posted Jeanne Cordova Interviewed at Traipsing Thru Films.

Bold Strokes Books Blog posted MY First Blog Ever and started the Bold Strokes Books Author Festival UK website.

Elisa posted

I’m Here. I’m Queer. What the Hell Do I read? posted Playgrounds and Prejudice: GLSEN’s New study on Homophobia and Gender Nonconformity in Elementary Schools and Glad Day Bookshop in Toronto – The Queer Independent Bookstore – Gets A New Chance At Life.

Kissed By Venus posted Venus Magazine on MagCloud.com.

Lambda Literary posted

lesbian meets books nyc posted The Last Nude by Ellis Avery: So hot, it’s cool.

QLit posted

Readings In Lesbian and Bisexual Women’s Fiction posted Readings welcomes Chris Paynter.

Sistahs On the Shelf Literary Promo Blog posted New Publication: reSOUND magazine – Free Digital Edition.

Women and Words posted

      

Sarah Diemer (aka Elora Bishop) posted Announcing: Sappho’s Fables — Lesbian Fairy Tale Retellings! and a guest post at KB Grant’s blog.

KB Grant posted Guest Blogger Review: Cecile from All I Want and More Reviews Strapless and Strawberry *Lesbian Romance*.

Q. Kelly posted The Cover Artist Speaketh!Fear Is Unattractive, Equal Opportunity, and What’s Next.

Catherine Lundoff posted My events for the next two weeks – update and Book blurbing.

Andi Marquette posted Writers are nuckin’ futs and New longish short story.

Lara C. Zielinsky posted Would you believe…?

“LGBTQ Fiction” was posted at the Horn Book (children’s and young adults’ books).

“thrilLiterate Reading Series Finale: Feb 24 & Feb 25 [Vancouver]” was posted at Arsenal Pulp.

Reviews are now linked at the Lesbrary’s twitter account!

Laura Mandanas reviewed “Blazing Star” by Marie Carlson

Title: “Blazing Star”
Author: Marie Carlson
Genre: Urban Fantasy Erotic Romance
Length: 9,800 words / 20 pages
Initial Release: Cast the Cards anthologyPublisher’s Blurb: Bea is a mind reader, weary of battle, but still with the Star in her eyes. Her lover, Hope, returns to Bea’s sanctuary in need of comfort and guidance, which Bea is only too happy to give. But the respite is short-lived when other Hunters show up at the sanctuary with news of an impending battle. Bea knows she must let Hope go, even though it may be for the last time.Some thoughts about “Blazing Star”:

  1. The world-building was interesting, but blunt. When Bea starts cooking dinner, I don’t need to hear about the “homegrown chickens raised by a guy down the street, payment for carding protection magic into wool that he wove into blankets for his family.” Just tell me that she’s making chicken, and leave the explanation about the bartering system for another time. Or not at all.
  2. The characters were reasonably strong, especially given the story’s short length. I believed them, and they weren’t unbearably stereotypical.
  3. I really wasn’t into the sex scenes. They were long and interrupted the flow of the story. The writing was fine, but I found myself wishing they’d just get it over with. Unfortunately, that’s not really how erotic romance stories work.
  4. Weak editing. There was a weird continuity error involving the death of someone’s mother.
  5. Despite its flaws, at the end of the story, I wanted to know what happened next. I think it’s just the soft spot I have for lesbian literature. This was not a good short story.

“Blazing Star” is available from Storm Moon Press in eBook form for $1.99.

Link Round Up


Bella Books posted Back to Salem Book Trailer by Alex Marcoux and February Releases Available for Download and Now Shipping!

Dog Ear Audio has announced their newest title, “Hit By A Farm”, written and narrated by Catherine Friend. You can listen to a sample on their website.

Elisa posted Event: Apply for the LGBT Scholarship.

Gay League posted Gay Previews For April.

Good Lesbian Books posted Lesbian Steampunk Stories.

Lambda Literary posted a mini link round up.

Lesbian Fiction Readers’ Choice Awards will start taking nominations for the 2011 awards on March 1st, and voting will begin April 1st for books released between January 1st and December 31st, 2011.

lesbian meets books nyc posted The Brooklyn Museum Part II: Djuna Barnes, Romaine Brooks and so much more.

 

Piercing Fiction posted Don’t lose the history.

Plunge Magazinean Ezine for Queer Women in Genre Literature is raising money via a Kickstarter campaign!

QLit posted QLit is Back.

The Rainbow Reader posted TRR’S FIRST ANNIVERSARY.

Readings In Lesbian and Bisexual Women’s Fiction posted Readings goes to the wolves.

Shelly’s LGBT Book Review Blog posted Site Updates and Improvements for Your Reading Pleasure.

Women and Words posted No, really. You need an editor. and Things we’re up to over here.

Alison Bechdel posted dazed, confused, addled, and befuddled.

Sarah Diemer (aka Elora Bishop) posted A Personal Plea: Please Don’t Pirate My Work.

Lynne Gerber was interviewed about her book Seeking the Straight and Narrow: Weight Loss and Sexual Reorientation in Evangelical America at Lambda Literary.

KB Grant posted Book Spotlight Post: The Princess’s Valentine (Pirates of Flaundia #2.5) by KT Grant.

Debra Hyde was interviewed at Bibrary Book Lust.

Karin Kallmaker posted The Heir to the Queendom.

Q. Kelly posted PotpourriPotpourri 2, and Indie Misconception Busters #1.

Malinda Lo posted The Miseducation of Cameron Post and Con or Bust: Where you can get a handmade print copy of “The Fox”.

Catherine Lundoff posted True Colors Bookstore and my books.

Lee Harlem Robinson (the pen name of Hannelore Arbyn) was interviewed at TimeOut Hong Kong.

Rachel Spangler posted 8 weeks till To LoveLife – Meet Elaine.

      

Glad Day Books has been bought–by 17 people! Read about it at Queerty, Lambda Literary, and Quill & Quire.

“Good Shit vs. Shit to Avoid: Lesbian Romance” was posted at Smart Bitches, Trashy Books. Check out the comments for much more.

“The Bodice Ripper: Lesbians in Corsets” was posted at For Books’ Sake.

“This week’s new books in Gay and Lesbian” was posted at Any New Books?

Trans-Sister Radio by Chris Bohjalian was reviewed at Good Lesbian Books.

Girls Who Bite: Lesbian Vampire Erotica edited by Delilah Devlin was reviewed at Kissed By Venus.

Best Lesbian Romance edited by Radclyffe was reviewed at Kissed By Venus.

Mfred Reviews Double-D Double Cross by Christa Faust

Butch Fatale is a Los Angeles-based private dick just barely scrapping by on whatever cases come her way.  While having sex with an old friend, a new case walks in the door– another butch is looking for her missing ex-girlfriend, Angie.  Butch suspects Angie is just another fallen ex-junkie, but decides to follow the leads where they may take her.  As it turns out, straight into trouble– Armenian gangsters, high-priced escort services, murder, mayhem, etc.  And a lot more sex.

Faust has written an odd book that reads as both a tribute and a farcical take on the classic mystery pulps of yore.  I can’t say it worked for me, but I think there is definitely a niche out there for interested readers.   As a devoted fan of romance novels, I was surprised to find myself thinking the sex gratuitous and overly-explict.  The first third of the book read like the filler plot in a porno and I was frustrated by the lack of a concrete story.   The sex scenes were not there to develop characters or plot and so I found them more distracting then titillating.

Once the mystery started to unravel, however, the story picked up and I enjoyed it.  When Faust lets Butch do her mystery-solving thing, both the writing and the character shine.  I also liked Faust’s command of setting– modern day LA became a seedy, rich setting for a classic noir tale.

Except that as the story continued into the final third,  Butch got lucky one too many times for me.  A common trope in pulp fiction is the literally down-trodden hero– so beat upon as to almost not function, yet also somehow able to save the day with his wits and his luck.  Butch got so lucky, so often, that I stopped believing she was good at her job.  A couple of promising scenes were utterly wasted when Butch took so long telling me about all of the mental connections she was making and clues she was putting together to beat the bad guy instead of just throwing the right punch at the right moment.

I also wasn’t really sure who this book was written for– a queer reader?  Pulp afficionados?  Straight men?  There were a few inside jokes I adored, like the character named Brink Bannon (Ann Bannon wrote the classic Beebo Brinker lesbian pulp novels).  But other times, Butch’s narrative voice veered into a preachy tone that rang false for a book written for queer audiences.  And the way Butch sexualizes every single woman she comes across made me rather uncomfortable– I wasn’t participating in it and it never hooked me, as a queer reader.

Anna reviewed Getting There by Lyn Denison

Getting There (2011) is the latest romance by Australian author Lyn Denison. Kat Oldfield moves back to her childhood stomping grounds when she inherits a run-down house from the ex-girlfriend who caused a permanent rift with her rigid family many years before. She’s coming off a much more recent loss, mourning the end of a ten-year relationship. As a non-bio mom, she’s struggling with custody issues and the feeling that she’s always going to be a failure. Although at first she feels that she’d probably be better off selling the house, after she returns home she takes the plunge and commits to fixing it up–trying to “get it right” in at least one aspect of her life. Enter Jess Andrews, a gorgeous renovation expert who runs a remodeling business with her ex-husband. Jess has children of her own, and their daughters hit it off (if not quite in the same way that their mothers do). As Kat and Jess come in to contact more often, their attraction deepens and becomes irresistible…

Jess and Kat have the usual obstacles of lesbian romance: no one knows who is gay or straight, or who is on the market; to add to the confusion, Jess still lives with her ex-husband and their children. No one is going to come right out and ask any pointed questions until the sexual tension has been ratcheted up a few notches. That’s all as expected, but Denison also weaves another plot through her love story. Kat’s father contacts her after many years of silence to inform her that her mother is in the hospital, which leads to some revelations about her family that Kat neither expects nor welcomes. As her entire life is being turned upside down, by uncovered secrets and by her unexpected attraction to Jess, Kat must find some solid ground before she can commit to love.

The secondary plot was an interesting approach that never quite meshed with the romance. Part of it might be that the book was so slight (clocking in at less than 200 pages) that it felt like Denison didn’t take the time to fully explore the implications of both aspects of her narrative. As a result, the relationship felt a little rushed and the “family secrets” portion felt strangely divorced from it. I do, however, appreciate that Denison’s characters are both divorced and have children and baggage and know they are attracted to women and are dealing with issues that real women might be dealing with (aside from the part where Kat inherits a house). Those who read and liked Denison’s The Wild One will be pleased to see Quinn and Rachel appear in this book as well.

Link Round Up

Pink by Lili Wilkinson cover   Zombies vs Unicorns cover   The Miseducation of Cameron Post by Emily M. Danforth cover

AfterEllen posted Your New School Library: “Pink,” “365 Days” and “Sister Mischief”.

Autostraddle posted “Cult Classic of Taiwanese Lesbian Literature” Now Excerpted In English, Available Online.

Bold Strokes Books posted WITH A MOUTHFUL OF TOOTHPASTE…

Elisa posted Referrals Program: January Top 10*

Good Lesbian Books posted The Quick List of Contemporary Lesbian YA Fiction and Historical Lesbian YA Fiction.

I’m Here. I’m Queer. What the Hell Do I Read? posted Zombies Vs. Unicorns: A Short Story Anthology with Gay and Lesbian Characters!

Kissed By Venus posted The Venus Magazine and Venus Magazine: Print Copy.

Lambda Literary posted

lesbian meets book nyc posted Difference, Desire, and Djuna: A shout out to the Brooklyn Museum.

QueerType posted February Publishing Notes.

One in Every Crowd by Ivan E. Coyote cover   A Day at the Inn by Catherine Lundoff   Hidden Truths by Jae

Alison Bechdel posted done.

Ivan E. Coyote posted the cover of her new book and was written about at GayVancouver.

Sarah Diemer posted Short Story Published: You can now read “The Witch Sea!”

KB Grant posted

Faith Hunter was interviewed at Women and Words.

Jae posted GLBT Bookshelf.

Q. Kelly posted

Malinda Lo posted January 2012 in Review.

Catherine Lundoff posted Stuff and more stuff and The writing income and book sales post.

KG MacGregor posted Alice B!!!

Radclyffe was interviewed at About.com Lesbian Life.

Lara C Zielinsky posted random scene.

“Romance Writers Ink Contest: An Exercise in Discrimination” was posted at Smart Bitches, Trashy Books.

“Opinion: Goodbye to Atlanta’s LGBT bookstore” was posted at Local 10.

cover of Sister Outsider by Audre LorderInseparable by Emma Donoghue

Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde was reviewed at things mean a lot.

Inseparable: Passion Between Women in Literature by Emma Donoghue was reviewed at the corner of your eye.

Britannia’s Glory: A History of Twentieth-Century Lesbians by Emily Hamer was reviewed at the corner of your eye.

New change to link round ups: only in-depth reviews will be posted here, but you can find the other reviews linked on my twitter!

Danika reviews The Dark Wife by Sarah Diemer

I’ve seen The Dark Wife reviewed and recommended all over the place, and I’ve been following the author’s blogs for a while, so I have to admit that I was a bit worried about how I would actually like it. Luckily, it doesn’t disappoint.

Honestly, you’ve probably heard this all before: The Dark Wife is a teen lesbian retelling of the myth of Persepolis (oops!) Persephone and Hades. That pretty much tells you all you need to know! Once you’ve heard the basic blurb of the book, there isn’t too much that comes up to surprise you. It’s not a plot-driven book, really. It is just a slowly building love story, one that comes naturally. It doesn’t seem to drag (much, at least–I did want to hurry Persephone along at times), it just unfolds in its own time.  The writing is easy-to-read and fits in with teen books, but at times it can be beautiful, too. The setting comes to life, and enough details are given to flesh out the world. It is a very satisfying story. The only complaint I had was that the end seemed rushed after the leisurely pace of the rest of the book, and didn’t quite fit with the tone of the middle portion of the book. That was a pretty minor quibble, however. I would definitely recommend this one.