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skudiklier's Reviews (647)
Graphic: Death, Transphobia, Violence, Colonisation
Moderate: Alcoholism, Medical content, Murder, War
Graphic: Rape, Sexual assault, Classism
Moderate: Abortion, Death of parent, Murder, Fire/Fire injury
Graphic: Child death, Death, Violence, Murder
Moderate: Ableism, Sexism
Graphic: Ableism, Violence, Murder
Thank you to Celadon Books and Netgalley for the chance to read and review this ARC.
Graphic: Infidelity, Racism, Toxic relationship, Classism
Moderate: Sexual assault, Sexual content
This book isn't perfect (it weirdly never mentions capitalism despite that feeling a bit like the elephant in the room at some points) but it doesn't need to be. It's an amazing wake-up call for white women and I really think we'd make a lot more progress more quickly if we could just snap our fingers and have everyone read this. And not just read it, but really really think about how your own racism plays into this.
Graphic: Misogyny, Racism, Sexism
Moderate: Death, Genocide, Hate crime, Racial slurs, Slavery, Violence, Xenophobia, Police brutality, Islamophobia, Murder, Cultural appropriation, Colonisation, Classism, Pandemic/Epidemic
Minor: Bullying, Eating disorder, Mass/school shootings, Pregnancy, Deportation
But later sections were so different from that and ugh I just loved this book. I took so many notes of quotes that made me feel things, and I'm excited to talk about this with my book club. This collection inspires me to write more and better.
Moderate: Cursing, Death, Misogyny, Suicide, Pandemic/Epidemic
Minor: Domestic abuse, Blood
Graphic: Violence, Murder, Abandonment
Moderate: Ableism, Fatphobia
One thing I thought was unique about this chapbook: I've read a lot of poems directed at exes that talk about how the ex should have known there would be poems about them, about how they'll know this is about them, etc. But this is interesting because the ex is a songwriter, and the narrator knows the songs are about her too. It makes the same idea fresh because there's this twist on it that I found really compelling.
Also just because I need to share them here are some of my favorite lines:
"look at how beautiful autumn is even
when everything is falling apart"
"what I mean to say is:
I may never write another poem,
but I’ve found a hundred other
uses for my hands"
"I want to make a big deal about still being alive"
Idk. There were so many things Jonathan did in the very beginning of the book that had me thinking "yeesh they're going to have to do a really good job of convincing me to like this guy for this to work." And....they didn't. It didn't work. Yes I felt for him in a lot of moments, yes I could see what Sam saw in him in some moments. Part of me *was* rooting for the relationship to work. But that same part of me was also desperately hoping for there to be even unconvincing proof that Jonathan was changing as a boss and wouldn't be so controlling and terrible towards his employees. And that just didn't happen.
So while I liked some things about this book, and was engaged, it was far more frustrating than satisfying for me.
One thing I will say for the book's credit is that I appreciated it debunked Stockholm Syndrome (briefly). It infuriates me when people act as if that's a real thing and so I was glad to see pushback on that in the book.
If you're fine with romances where the love interest is genuinely a terrible person to people he has power over, then I'd recommend this to you (genuinely--that's not even sarcastic. I know that wouldn't be a dealbreaker for some people). Otherwise, you might just be frustrated and wish this could have been as good as you wanted it to be.
Thank you to Sourcebooks Casablanca and Netgalley for the chance to read and review this ARC.
Graphic: Cursing, Toxic relationship, Medical content, Injury/Injury detail, Classism
Moderate: Death, Sexual content, Grief, Death of parent
Minor: Bullying, Homophobia, Car accident