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A Collapse of Horses
Brian Evenson
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Horrorstör
Grady Hendrix
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We Came to Welcome You
Vincent Tirado
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Horrorstör
Grady Hendrix
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Good Spirits (Ghosted, #1)
B.K. Borison
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Post from the Ace: What Asexuality Reveals About Desire, Society, and the Meaning of Sex forum
I'm finding it incredibly important how much Angela Chen highlights the difference between sexuality in men and sexuality in women and what it means to be sexual for these two groups of people. As she states in ch 3, Men are taught that they are not men , and therefore not deserving of respect or status, unless they can sleep with as many women as possible. Sex isn't just something predominant in men, it's something that is expected from them, a source of conversation, a way to show passion and a good life, with a lot of ace people having to play into that to not feel left out and be seen as weird. It's not even about sex most times, it's about fitting in and being seen with respect, It's about the status.
With women, however, it becomes so much more political. Women who don't engage in a sexual life are seen as repressed, shameful, going back to a time before they had sexual freedom and are seen as a political failure and even as "political conservative" for not exercising this right that they have, that the women who pursue sex are more fun and feminist than the women who don't.
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Post from the Ace: What Asexuality Reveals About Desire, Society, and the Meaning of Sex forum
Heterosexuality is a political institution that is taught and conditioned and reinforced.
Compulsory heterosexuality is not the belief that most people are heterosexual. It is a set of assumptions and behaviors—that only heterosexual love is innate, that women need men as social economic protectors—that support the idea of heterosexuality as the default and only option.
Compulsory sexuality is a set of assumptions and behaviors that support the idea that every normal person is sexual, that not wanting (socially approved) sex is unnatural and wrong, and that people who don't care about sexuality are missing out on a utterly necessary experience.
That first quote already had such an impact, but after reading the other two I just couldn't not share them. The fact that heterosexuality and being sexual is not only viewed as the normal by society, but it is forced and imposed onto everyone. People will always assume someone is heterosexual before considering that they might be queer, with that person then having to come out which is a whole other situation in itself, and the same happens with sexuality, with being asexual being seen as "the other option", instead of it being in the same level as someone who is sexual.
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Kiss of Seduction (Court of Chains, #1)
Rawnie Sabor
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Kiss of Seduction is a book that you read for the romance and, let’s be honest here, the smut, but I still found it to have such an interesting world building that relates really well with the characters, and consequently the romance.
Both Natalya and Evie have such a huge character development, with Natalya letting go of her closed off personality and allowing herself to be more vulnerable and for her emotions to be shown and Evie becoming more confident and proud of herself, with both of them helping each other with these aspects while building their relationship and growing feelings for each other.
Every other character was equally compelling and involved in the story in a way that makes you want to learn more about them, their story and their relationships.
The fantasy plot was carefully written and put together. It was interesting to learn about each greater fiend and how their powers worked and what effect they had on humans, and the history behind both the Court of Chains and the Heartlands. There’s quite a few trigger warnings and sensitive subjects, but these were also handled carefully.
I had such a fun time reading this book and am very excited to read the rest of the series.
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