Gideon the Ninth
Book
The Empereor Needs Necromancers. The Ninth Necromancer needs a swordswoman. Gideon has a sword, some...
Falling Gracefully
Book
What do you do when your life is over before it even really began? For Melody Bledsoe, the...
Lesbian Romance Self Discovery
Pulp
Book
In 1955, eighteen-year-old Janet Jones keeps the love she shares with her best friend Marie a...
Buried (Alex Hope, #2)
Book
‘I could hear her screams; and they made me breathless with fear. As I ran and searched, ran and...
Lesbian Crime Law Enforcement
Road Blocks( By Design, #8)
Book
Life for Candace and Jameson Reid is never boring. A budget fight with the New York State...
Lesbian Politics Family Life
Solve for i
Book
Maths wiz Gemma Rowe has found the one problem her maths can’t solve: she’s fallen for her...
Lesbian Coming of Age Coming Out Contemporary
Lesson Plans (Lesson Plans #1)
Book
Lesson Plans is a spin-off of the series By Design and would fall somewhere between books 2 and 3 of...
Lesbian
Why Britain Hates Men: Exposing Feminism
Book
PLEASE NOTE: The content of this book is virtually identical to the content of 'Exposing Feminism',...
Kara Skinner (332 KP) rated Note to Self in Books
Sep 10, 2019
Goodreads rating: 3.73 out of 5 stars
My rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Anna never considered herself bisexual or a lesbian. She’s totally in love with her husband and happy with her life as a wife, mother, and cop. But that all changes when she meets Susan, a pretty, feminine doctor, who turns Anna’s world upside down. Confused and full of guilt from thinking erotic thoughts about Susan while married to Nick, Anna turns to her journal to sort it all out.
Okay, once this story gets going, it’s great. But in the beginning it is so damn boring. Journal or not, Anna does not get to the frigging point for like four or five pages! I was tempted to go wash the dishes at least twice in the beginning of the book. When the dishes are pulling me away from a book, and not the other way around, something is very wrong.
However, it does read like a real diary, so kudos on that.
Once Anna gets her shit together and actually starts telling what happened, the story gets a lot better. Her inner turmoil is relatable and realistic and makes me like her alot. Susan’s character is also great. Being very girly, Susan has a nice contrast with Anna, and that makes their time together that much sweeter. I always love it when characters are developed, even for short erotica pieces like this one.
I do have a problem with Anna being married, though. Her husband is a great guy who is very supportive of her and their son. He showed up to their son’s kindergarten barbecue, doesn’t mind his wife being “one of the guys”, and doesn’t even get jealous from other men’s stares at her.
It’s really clear that they are still very much in love and unless it becomes clear in the sequel that he’s a serial cheater or hiding huge secrets, (like, “I killed my boss and embezzled five million dollars” type of secret. Not “that purple dress really did make you look like Barney and I didn’t tell you even though I knew pictures were going on Facebook” type of secret) then I’m never going to like Anna’s and Susan’s relationship as much as I could.
Lesbian relationship? No problem. More power to ya. Cheating on a very sweet person? Huge problem. Shouldn’t happen. Burn in hell.
You can read Note to Self on Smashwords for free. I recommend you check it out if it sounds like your cup of tea. Speaking of tea, take some time to read with a cup of it. The holidays are coming up, and you need some relaxation before your life dissolves into chaos. Take care!