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enbygojira's Reviews (815)
I wish people wouldn't look at non-fiction books as if they were fiction. Redefining Realness is a beautiful and raw memoir by a person who not only survived abuse, rape and transphobia, but a hell of an overall difficult life, getting to a place where she feels comfortable telling us her journey. In these pages, Janet Mock allows us to go through her experiences with her, to get to know not only the person behind the pages, but a rough life many will fortunately never know—and many still do everywhere in the world.
You don't have to like the book, but how can anyone complain that she focuses way too much on romance? When she's telling her story she can damn well focus on anything she wants. Pardon my Portuguese, but eu hein?
You don't have to like the book, but how can anyone complain that she focuses way too much on romance? When she's telling her story she can damn well focus on anything she wants. Pardon my Portuguese, but eu hein?
Pensei bem em deixar sem nota, visto que não é exatamente o tipo de obra que combina com meu ritmo de leitura e que, a grosso modo, eu precisaria de pelo menos mais uma ou duas tentativas para absorver tudo o que tem aqui, mas qualquer outra avaliação seria um desrespeito com o trabalho primoroso de Jacyntho Lins Brandão. Possivelmente um dos melhores trabalhos tradutórios que já vi.
"Be a bit gay, be very gay.
Be the glitter that shows up
in unexpected places."
Be the glitter that shows up
in unexpected places."
By now P. Djèlí Clark has definitely become one of my favorite speculative fiction writers. Besides his beautiful and detailed worldbuilding, his characters are just alive and such a pleasure to follow—I didn't think I'd like Hamed and Onsi as much as I like Fatma, but boy was I wrong!
Maravilhoso, ainda que curto demais. Paula e Mayara, preciso que vocês escrevam e desenhem mais! A estrutura me lembra bastante os contos rápidos de terror em Fuan no Tane, que também têm essa aura de sonho e nonsense perturbador.
Fica difícil comentar e fazer jus ao texto delicado de Natalia Borges Polesso. Embora coletâneas sejam uma coisa complicada em si, desniveladas como são, e apesar dos contos às vezes curtos demais, difíceis de envolver, Amora mantém em seu lirismo o sentimento doído e apertado da existência queer, um mundo de experiências em que só existindo pra saber.