Zombies and Sexuality: Essays on Desire and the Living Dead
Steve Jones and Shaka McGlotten
Book
Since the early 2000s, zombies have increasingly swarmed the landscape of popular culture, with ever...
The Feminist Bookstore Movement: Lesbian Antiracism and Feminist Accountability
Book
From the 1970s through the 1990s more than one hundred feminist bookstores built a transnational...
This Book is Gay
Book
Lesbian. Bisexual. Queer. Transgender. Straight. Curious. This book is for everyone, regardless of...
Gaming Representation: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in Video Games
Jennifer Malkowski and TreaAndrea M. Russworm
Book
Recent years have seen an increase in public attention to identity and representation in video...
Modernist Women Writers and Spirituality: A Piercing Darkness: 2016
Andrew Radford and Heather Walton
Book
Concentrating on female modernists specifically, this volume examines spiritual issues and their...
Loose Lips: Fanfiction Parodies of Great (and Terrible) Literature from the Smutty Stage of Shipwreck
Amy Stephenson and Casey Childers
Book
Fanfiction has always been there, lurking in the darkest corners of the internet. Two years ago, Amy...
Veronica Pena (690 KP) rated Chasing Amy (1997) in Movies
May 11, 2020
I think that it's a really interesting plot, but also the subject matter is really important. There's a lot to learn in this film and I really appreciate that. Especially given the time it came out. 1997 wasn't the most conservative time in history but it wasn't the most open either. As a queer kid, I loved every minute of this movie. There are definitely some discrepancies and things that are a bit uncomfortable, but I think that's life and that's why this movie is so good. Heck, I really liked it. Who cares what anyone else says?
Cruising the Movies: A Sexual Guide to Oldies on TV
William E. Jones and Boyd McDonald
Book
Ronnie Reagan's bizarre legs are sufficient reason to watch John Loves Mary (1949), a picture so...
Ali A (82 KP) rated The Meadows in Books
Sep 11, 2023
Every youth hopes to get a letter to attend one of the places where only the best and brightest go to be even better and brighter: the Estuary, the Glades, the Meadows…
When Eleanor is accepted to go to the Meadows, it means her escape from the Cove and a hard life by the sea. But, though the Meadows is filled with beautiful and wonderful things, it hoards dark secrets: its purpose is to reform its students from their attractions, to show them that the way of life is only possible through their way. Maybe Eleanor starts to believe, but then she meets Rose, and everything changes.
A year after leaving the Meadows, Eleanor and her friends are on the outside, living back in society - but not everything is as they hoped. Eleanor is an adjudicator, someone who makes sure former students haven’t strayed from the lives they were trained to live. But the past isn’t letting go of Eleanor and as secrets unravel, Eleanor must fight against everything she has been taught to be, especially if she can find the girl that she lost.
I originally was interested in this title when I saw it on BookishFirst because it was being marketed as “a queer, YA Handmaid's Tale meets Never Let Me Go” and I was all about that. I also love a good dystopian novel so this was really right up my alley.
That being said, I absolutely loved and devoured this novel over the course of the weekend when I didn’t have the interruption of work. The world building is intriguing and the “perfect” society is everything but (aren’t they all). The characters were also complex and engrossing - even the ones I wasn’t the biggest fans of, I still wanted them to succeed.
I absolutely recommend this book to those not only those who love dystopian novels, but those who want a page turning science fiction with queer characters.
*Thank you Dial Books and BookishFirst for an ARC copy of this book in exchange for an honest review
The Argonauts
Book
An intrepid voyage out to the frontiers of the latest thinking about love, language, and family ...
Biography memoir social issues