User Profile

Llaverac

Llaverac@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 8 months ago

Currently interested in queer books and obscure comics [he/him]

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Llaverac's books

Currently Reading

Angela Chen: Ace (2020, Beacon Press) 5 stars

An engaging exploration of what it means to be asexual in a world that's obsessed …

5 stars

I've identified as gay for a while, but these last years I realized I was probably closer to aroace, but hadn't found a satisfying confirmation online, so I was excited to read this book. I'm happy to announce that it lives up to its ambitious subtitle (What Asexuality Reveals About Desire, Society, and the Meaning of Sex).

Ideas I particularly liked seeing explored or picked apart:

  • How labels are useful to find meaning and shared experiences. (The words are gifts. If you know which terms to search, you know how to find others who might have something to teach. They are, like Lucid said, keys. Intellectual entryways to the ace world and other worlds. Offerings of language for as long as they bring value.)
  • Compulsory sexuality: I LOVE it when authors analyze concepts that don't necessarily imply each other. Yes, you can want intimacy but not …
Joseph McBrinn: Queering the Subversive Stitch (2021, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc) No rating

The history of men's needlework has long been considered a taboo subject. This is the …

🧶🧵🪡

No rating

I heard about this book via this post on Tumblr and immediately thought that YES, I would like to read more about how men have actually engaged with fiber crafts for a long time, especially since the blurb says:

It reveals that since medieval times men have threaded their own needles, stitched and knitted, woven lace, handmade clothes, as well as other kinds of textiles, and generally delighted in the pleasures and possibilities offered by all sorts of needlework.

Well.

The book actually focuses on a period that goes from the Victorian era to the contemporary era, and when I say focus, I really mean FOCUS. The author describes at length the work of several English and American authors and artists, with probably more details that I was ready to read about.

On one hand some passages were really interesting and I appreciated how the author's point of view was …

reviewed Frieren T03 by Kanehito Yamada (Frieren, #3)

Kanehito Yamada, Tsukasa Abe: Frieren T03 (Paperback, French language, 2022, Ki-Oon) 2 stars

Que deviennent les héros une fois le mal vaincu ?

Stark, guerrier et disciple d'Eisen, …

😴

2 stars

J'ai été attiré par le pitch : "Que deviennent les héros une fois le mal vaincu ?" qui n'est pas banal.

Après lecture des 3 premiers tomes cependant, je le trouve assez mensonger. L'action se déroule en réalité 80 ans après que le mal ait été vaincu et la situation n'a pas l'air très différente des récits de fantasy usuels. Il y a des nouveaux vilains à battre, et comme l'antagoniste de ce volume fait partie des "sept sages du chaos", je suppose que six autres vont lui succéder (puis leurs supérieurs après eux etc.) Il n'y a d'ailleurs ni surprise ni suspense dans la manière dont Frieren bat cette antagoniste, vu que tout nous est expliqué en détail juste avant et qu'elle utilise un gros lieu commun du shônen pour y arriver.

Visuellement, les arrière-plans sont très jolis et détaillés, mais les personnages sont assez lisses et peu expressifs. …

James Stokoe: Sobek (Paperback, 2019, ShortBox) No rating

Life is pretty good being a gigantic crocodile god: spend your days lazing on the …

Short and fun. I bought it just before ShortBox closed up, and I loved the contrast between Sobek's towering presence on the cover and, well, his actual personality in the story.

Beth Fuller: Witching Hour (EBook, 2023, Quindrie Press) No rating

Esio knows all the rules about travelling to the fae realm: stick to the path, …

Why do you tell the reader the rules of the fae realm if you... end up not using them? Who is the main character, Ted or Esio? I feel like none of them were fleshed out enough to know what the story wanted to say.

The fae realm looked magnificent though, it was worth it just for the visuals.

reviewed Find a Seat by Faye Stacey

Faye Stacey: Find a Seat (EBook, 2023, Quindrie Press) 3 stars

It's hard being dumped. It's even harder when, on the way home from being dumped, …

🚋💀🍄

3 stars

The premise is interesting: the main character finds themself in a train for the "lost and weary" that belongs to Death, and wonders if they want to stay aboard. The train and its passengers are also covered in mushrooms, which creates a unique atmosphere.

However I felt that Death's characterization was a bit inconsistent and the emotional stakes were quickly rendered moot.

Taylor Titmouse: Roger Crenshaw: The Shadow in the Shelves (EBook, 2022) No rating

Burning hands rouse Roger in the night--but do they belong to the bookseller Cam Ellis, …

The first two stories were more lighthearted, whereas this one revolves around a mystery and has a heavier mood in general. I didn't not like it, it's nice that the atmosphere isn't the same from one story to another, but the first two stories were more up my alley.

Taylor Titmouse: Roger Crenshaw: The Wolves of the West (EBook, 2022) 5 stars

Wild beasts and wilder men roam the deserts of Arizona, and folklorist Roger Crenshaw runs …

On one hand, the story has the perfect length, it's long enough to flesh out the characters and the setting before the sex scene at the end.

Having read a lot of mangas, comics etc. before turning to books-without-pictures again, I'm still used to spending between 30 min and 1 hour in a story, and then moving on to something else. With essays and novels, I sometimes still resent the fact that I have to commit to them for hours, which become days and sometimes weeks. Yes they generally have chapters, but it's not the same. So it's nice to find shorter stories that don't feel too short.

On the other hands, ugh. The characters are lovable and I would like to read more about them, but it would defeat the previous point.

Angela Chen: Ace (2020, Beacon Press) 5 stars

An engaging exploration of what it means to be asexual in a world that's obsessed …

Porous borders are intentional. Aces offer up all these terms to whoever might benefit, and one line of thinking is that anyone can identify as ace if they like. The purpose is not to encourage people to behave rigidly as a condition of being accepted, but to embrace complexity and let people identify how they wish and allow their sexualities to change and overlap. The ace world is not an obligation. Nobody needs to identify, nobody is trapped, nobody needs to stay forever and pledge allegiance. The words are gifts. If you know which terms to search, you know how to find others who might have something to teach. They are, like Lucid said, keys. Intellectual entryways to the ace world and other worlds. Offerings of language for as long as they bring value.

Ace: What Asexuality Reveals About Desire, Society, and the Meaning of Sex by  (Page 27)