Reviews and Comments

Goblin

goblin@wyrms.de

Joined 2 years, 10 months ago

Black lives matter Be gay do crimes ACAB

Pronouns: she/they

Living in occupied ancestral lands of the Osage nation (St. Louis, Missouri)

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Aaron A. Reed: Subcutanean (2020, Self Published)

Insecure college senior Orion loves music, books, and his best friend Niko. When the two …

no two copies are the same

I was intrigued to hear of this novel where every printed copy is a unique variation. Would the flow of the novel suffer? Would the seams show? Would it feel contrived? Is it just gimmick?

I'm happy to report that the experiment turned out very well, at least in my copy generated from seed #44346. If I had read the novel with no context I wouldn't have guessed it was assembled from text variations.

It's a horror novel, creepy not gory. Well maybe some variations get gory, I don't know. (hmm, this is hard to review)

It's also gay coming of age story. The narrator is a gay college student in the 1990s, with an unrequited crush on his best friend. He eventually works through that... after a series of horrifying events. I think it's likely that element exists in all versions of the book.

And the uniqueness of …

Joshua Whitehead: full-metal indigiqueer (Paperback, 2017, Talonbooks)

This poetry collections focuses on a hybridized Indigiqueer Trickster character named Zoa who brings together …

This was a lot of fun to read. 2S poet Joshua Whitehead takes on an invented trickster persona Zoa, then proceeds to riff on and infect well known English language poets, twisting and exploring them in a queer and anticolonial direction. Good stuff.

Lisa Tatonetti: Written by the Body (2021, University of Minnesota Press)

The book is about expansive indigenous understanding of gender, described through historical record, literature, and film. I learned about a lot of sources I hadn't heard of. The writing is a bit academic, which is likely what caused me to set the book aside for a while, but I did enjoy it and I'm so glad I picked it up again and finished it while vacationing recently.

Shola von Reinhold: Lote (Paperback, 2020, Jacaranda Books)

Lush and frothy, incisive and witty, Shola von Reinhold’s decadent queer literary debut immerses readers …

resistance through aesthetics

It's about being black and queer, it's about aesthetics and adornment as a kind of spirituality, it's about escape and creation/reinvention of oneself, it's about reclaiming history, it's weird and hard to describe.

Felt nearly perfect. The only thing I can find to fault is not having nearly enough descriptions of Mathilda's outfits. Mathilda must have a fabulous fashion sense and there's a part of me with a burning need to know what she is wearing at all times.