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saramdeuri's Reviews (310)
leaving this here for now cause I just can't get into the dynamic or the characters too much. fascinating steampunk vibe but unfortunately not what I'm looking for rn.
love how miss meatbun can go from an eloquent, moving monologue about the intersection of love and desire and the dangers of falling into all-consuming lust and then follow it up near-immediately with "oh no, shizun fell on mo rans behemoth schlong! what now!"
anyways said monologues were very impressive. I'm intrigued to see more !! I think I'll wait for the official English books to read the rest, because I'm enjoying this translation so much. genuinely a phenomenal job.
anyways said monologues were very impressive. I'm intrigued to see more !! I think I'll wait for the official English books to read the rest, because I'm enjoying this translation so much. genuinely a phenomenal job.
I'm gonna need a while to recover from this
simply not compelling to me. the humour works better for me in visual media, I think
challenging
emotional
hopeful
mysterious
reflective
tense
medium-paced
Such an excellent exploration of language/linguistics and feminism. The bits and pieces of invented documents and speeches etc at the beginning of each chapter really worked in bringing the world alive. You really get to feel for the women, especially Nazareth and Michaela. they're a lesbian power couple to me... I'll refrain from writing much here because I feel it's one of those books that works well with minimal knowledge.
The context surrounding the book is super interesting too, what with the author being an accomplished linguist and feminist too. I feel she really achieved what she set out for in this book. I doubt I'll read the rest of the series, because I enjoy the open ending of this one so much, but I'm interested in reading her more academic linguistics stuff.
The context surrounding the book is super interesting too, what with the author being an accomplished linguist and feminist too. I feel she really achieved what she set out for in this book. I doubt I'll read the rest of the series, because I enjoy the open ending of this one so much, but I'm interested in reading her more academic linguistics stuff.
adventurous
emotional
funny
mysterious
medium-paced
I'll be honest, I got a little tired of the Xia Sini stuff after about 10 chapters, but it was still a little fun after that too. Especially appreciated the discussion on how this affected him emotionally. Also loved finding out more about Taxian-Jun - you mean to tell me he's been treating Wanning like a wife this whole time, complaining about how hard his day's been, falling asleep in his lap? man's in denial. he's been in denial so long. how long will you take to realise why the box opened for Wanning? too long, frankly
I'll keep reading on for sure, the timeline-muddling is a great tension-builder. I need to know why he was sent back really... and who that guy is... and what happens to Bugui...
I'll keep reading on for sure, the timeline-muddling is a great tension-builder. I need to know why he was sent back really... and who that guy is... and what happens to Bugui...
a fairly thorough look at how fanfiction communities approach issues of consent inside and outside fandom. I do feel that there is much more to say, though I understand that the author was tackling a few specific points. Still, I wish there was a little more discussion on eroticised non-consent.
The author is incredibly respectful, for the topic that they're talking about, and the epilogue that highlights racism issues within fandom was also much needed. I definitely recommend this to anyone who is in fandom space and fandom studies.
The author is incredibly respectful, for the topic that they're talking about, and the epilogue that highlights racism issues within fandom was also much needed. I definitely recommend this to anyone who is in fandom space and fandom studies.
pretty good collection of theories, if a bit too verbose at points. I appreciate the addition of extra resources and exercises added at each chapter, since the languages I speak aren't talked about in very much detail at all here. this is a great book for Arabic translators especially.
adventurous
mysterious
fast-paced
sorry excuse me as I scream incoherently about this for the next three days.
certainly not the best BL I've read but probably up there, depends how the next few volumes deliver! hilarious to see mo ran immediately revert back to 15yo boy thought patterns post-time travel. very intrigued by the lust v love dichotomy the author presents, with mo ran so confused about the weight of his emotions. also like to see a teacher/student dynamic where the teacher is entirely aware that morally speaking he's in the wrong (I do still ship it though. unfortunately. I would in fact argue that mo ran is more morally reprehensible than wanning, you'll know exactly why)
good translation work overall, flows smoothly.
certainly not the best BL I've read but probably up there, depends how the next few volumes deliver! hilarious to see mo ran immediately revert back to 15yo boy thought patterns post-time travel. very intrigued by the lust v love dichotomy the author presents, with mo ran so confused about the weight of his emotions. also like to see a teacher/student dynamic where the teacher is entirely aware that morally speaking he's in the wrong (I do still ship it though. unfortunately. I would in fact argue that mo ran is more morally reprehensible than wanning, you'll know exactly why)
good translation work overall, flows smoothly.