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lizshayne 's review for:
A Gentleman's Position
by KJ Charles
Speaking of reading for the plot...
This was my least favorite of the series from a romance perspective, but I loved watching all the narrative threads come together and also Richard was an idiot and needed to be told it.
So these books aren’t ACTUALLY designed as meditations on different forms of power disparity. They just happen to be.
The first book is about mentorship, the second is about both BDSM and the authority of class, the last is about employee/employer and also what constitutes respectable work.
The question is not whether such relationships can work—my god, man, it’s a romance novel, of COURSE they’ll work—but asking about the kinds of negotiations that go into making such things work. Can the members of a relationship create and thus grant equality, especially when the world thinks otherwise?
This was my least favorite of the series from a romance perspective, but I loved watching all the narrative threads come together and also Richard was an idiot and needed to be told it.
So these books aren’t ACTUALLY designed as meditations on different forms of power disparity. They just happen to be.
The first book is about mentorship, the second is about both BDSM and the authority of class, the last is about employee/employer and also what constitutes respectable work.
The question is not whether such relationships can work—my god, man, it’s a romance novel, of COURSE they’ll work—but asking about the kinds of negotiations that go into making such things work. Can the members of a relationship create and thus grant equality, especially when the world thinks otherwise?