Monthly Archives: April 2021

Playing Knotty by Elia Winters

Standard
Playing Knotty by Elia Winters

Elia Winters. Playing Knotty. POcket Star, 2015. 264 pp. $4.99

****

Set in Boston (local to me) with just enough attention to detail to feel authentic. Bookstore owner Emma is barely making ends meet, and when an acquaintance –Ian– asks if he can rent her back room for a ropes course, her feelings are mixed but she ultimately says yes. The scheduled rope model catches the flu, Emma stands in, and her simmering attraction to Ian bursts into flame at being consensually bound up by her crush. A misunderstanding over how much each likes the other nearly derails the romance, but things turn out all right (neatly wrapped up?) in the end.

Long paragraphs over the knotting process may have some readers skimming, but the realistic characters that normalize fetish play, polyamory, and consent, paired with hot sex scenes, made this one a winner for me.

Level Up: A Geek Girl Rom Com (Fandom Hearts # 1) by Cathy Yardley

Standard
Level Up: A Geek Girl Rom Com (Fandom Hearts # 1) by Cathy Yardley

Yardley, Cathy. Level Up: A Geek Girl Rom Com (Fandom Hearts # 1). Swerve, 2017. $3.99

*****

I love geeky romance, and this one has friends to lovers, some fun cosplay & competition, a woman fighting to earn her place in the tech industry and all the baggage that comes with it, and some favorite tropes like snowbound and there is only one bed. I finished this in one sitting and promptly put every book Cathy Yardley has written on hold and on my to-read list. She writes geeky gamer techy girls with authenticity.

The Troublemaker Next Door by Marie Harte

Standard
The Troublemaker Next Door by Marie Harte

Harte, Marie. The Troublemaker Next Door. Sourcebooks, 2014. ISBN 978-1402287343 304 pp. $12.99

This story about neighbors who hook up because they don’t have time for a real relationship, and then, predictably, catch feelings, is so disappointing.

The sex scenes are hot, but the author’s choice of referring to a character (Vanessa) as “Hitler with a mop” in chapter 5 (page 272 of 1498 in the ebook version on OverDrive) because she is neat is so incredibly offensive and minimizes the horrific suffering millions of Jews, gypsies, and homosexual people endured at the hands of Nazis. Using a powerful word freely and casually diminishes its impact and the losses of people who suffered. A writer can and must choose her words with care.

As offensive as the misuse of the word “Nazi” is the introduction of characters with alternative sexualities are introduced and a main character makes several jokes about switching teams as if being gay or lesbian is a choice.

And THEN there were scenes with the female characters worrying over their weight and food choices (“normally she’d avoid the greasy meats and starches”), perpetuating women’s body issues.

The three female friends in the story “own” terms like slut and whore, but this was grating and rung out as outdated shaming of casual sex.

The sexual harassment subplot that the book opens with is never resolved.

The novel relies on stock characters (the blue collar guy, the starting over business woman on a rebound) and romance tropes (fit bodies, big dicks, multiple orgasms).

The missed opportunity to give Seattle more of a starring character role is also disappointing.

Published in 2014, this reads like something from the early 1990s. There are SO many better contemporary books out there with fully-fleshed characters who are complex, evolved, and woke. Sourcebooks, you need better editing of your authors.

Combustion by Elia Winters

Standard
Combustion by Elia Winters

Winters, Elia. Combustion. Cecaelia Press, 2021. ISBN 978-1951589035 226 pp. $12.99

****

Spinster Astrid is a girl machinist whose passion is designing sex toys for clients. She wants to enter a design in the World’s Fair, but without a (male) sponsor, her chances for entry are nil. Enter a watchmaker who just needs one good idea. They team up, test the device together and sparks fly.

This Steampunk erotic romance layers a Victorian setting with consent, pleasure and feminism. The sex scenes are detailed, and hot.