avatarPagebound Royalty Badge

minsuni

Min ☆ she/her ☆ 24 ☆ pt ☆ socially anxious and very chronically online

13040 points

0% overlap
Top ContributorPride 2025
Sapphic Across Genres
Fall 2025 Readalong
Blood Suckers
My Taste
Daughter of No Worlds (The War of Lost Hearts, #1)
Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
The Serpent and the Wings of Night (Crowns of Nyaxia, #1)
Empire of the Vampire (Empire of the Vampire, #1)
A Ballad for Slayers & Monsters
Reading...
Love Me Not: A Sapphic CEO x Nanny Billionaire Auction Romance (Pétale Auction Book 1)

minsuni commented on minsuni's review of S/He

9h
  • S/He
    minsuni
    Oct 05, 2025
    4.5
    Enjoyment: 4.5Quality: 5.0Characters: Plot:
    🏳️‍🌈
    ❤️
    🏳️‍⚧️

    While this is the story of Minnie Bruce Pratt and her navigating her life as a lesbian and feminist, while figuring out her sexuality, gender and the way she presents herself, I found this book to be, at its core, a love letter to Leslie Feinberg.

    With the book mainly focusing on lesbianism and feminism and Minnie’s relationship with Leslie, it approaches these topics in a way that they all correlate to each other and to Minnie’s life. She talks about women’s oppression and how they’re seen in a bad lighting, specifically by men, and her struggles with that in her daily life and the way people around her think and feel about this subject, specifically women (it’s so sad to see how many women are against women). She talks about race and how people of color are seen as inferior, or not even seen at all, and how queer/trans people of color are not given the attention they deserve. She talks about how queer and trans people keep being erased no matter how they present themselves, cause there never seems to be a proper way to appeal to everyone and with (heterosexual) people always having different opinions on the “right way” to be queer.

    And she talks about feeling safe and happy in a relationship and having to unlearn the shame she felt in her previous one and the meaning of being a wife to a man now compared to a butch lesbian. The way she described her relationship with Leslie was truly so beautiful, how Leslie always made her feel safe, wanted, loved, cared for, always being careful to ask consent and knowing how to talk to her and touch her. The longing looks and casual touches they would exchange both in public and private, it’s so obvious how much love they had for each other and how good they were to each other, always sweet and caring.

    I loved seeing Minnie grow throughout her life and that, even though she sometimes put her own struggles against other people, she would then realize that everyone is free to do whatever they want and dress however they like, no matter their genre or sexuality, and I love even more how much impact Leslie had on her with helping her understand this.

    11
    comments 2
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on a post

    10h
  • Love Me Not: A Sapphic CEO x Nanny Billionaire Auction Romance (Pétale Auction Book 1)
    Dedication

    For those who fantasize about riding their hot, masc, billionaire boss’s shoe

    I mean, can’t say that I have but you definitely have my attention now

    9
    comments 3
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on gracie's update

    gracie earned a badge

    10h
    Level 9

    Level 9

    12000 points

    105
    46
    Reply
  • Love Me Not: A Sapphic CEO x Nanny Billionaire Auction Romance (Pétale Auction Book 1)
    Dedication

    For those who fantasize about riding their hot, masc, billionaire boss’s shoe

    I mean, can’t say that I have but you definitely have my attention now

    9
    comments 3
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on a post

    13h
  • Empire of the Damned (Empire of the Vampire, #2)
    Thoughts from 100%

    Girl in a jacket

    20
    comments 21
    Reply
  • minsuni wrote a review...

    14h
  • S/He
    minsuni
    Oct 05, 2025
    4.5
    Enjoyment: 4.5Quality: 5.0Characters: Plot:
    🏳️‍🌈
    ❤️
    🏳️‍⚧️

    While this is the story of Minnie Bruce Pratt and her navigating her life as a lesbian and feminist, while figuring out her sexuality, gender and the way she presents herself, I found this book to be, at its core, a love letter to Leslie Feinberg.

    With the book mainly focusing on lesbianism and feminism and Minnie’s relationship with Leslie, it approaches these topics in a way that they all correlate to each other and to Minnie’s life. She talks about women’s oppression and how they’re seen in a bad lighting, specifically by men, and her struggles with that in her daily life and the way people around her think and feel about this subject, specifically women (it’s so sad to see how many women are against women). She talks about race and how people of color are seen as inferior, or not even seen at all, and how queer/trans people of color are not given the attention they deserve. She talks about how queer and trans people keep being erased no matter how they present themselves, cause there never seems to be a proper way to appeal to everyone and with (heterosexual) people always having different opinions on the “right way” to be queer.

    And she talks about feeling safe and happy in a relationship and having to unlearn the shame she felt in her previous one and the meaning of being a wife to a man now compared to a butch lesbian. The way she described her relationship with Leslie was truly so beautiful, how Leslie always made her feel safe, wanted, loved, cared for, always being careful to ask consent and knowing how to talk to her and touch her. The longing looks and casual touches they would exchange both in public and private, it’s so obvious how much love they had for each other and how good they were to each other, always sweet and caring.

    I loved seeing Minnie grow throughout her life and that, even though she sometimes put her own struggles against other people, she would then realize that everyone is free to do whatever they want and dress however they like, no matter their genre or sexuality, and I love even more how much impact Leslie had on her with helping her understand this.

    11
    comments 2
    Reply
  • Post from the S/He forum

    1d
  • S/He
    Thoughts from 23% (page 49/Steam Heat)

    Curious to have to dress less "like a woman" to find the women like you. [...] Is it a belief that a woman who loves women really just wants to be a man, and so surely she will dress like one?

    I feel like a lot of queer people have this struggle of "looking queer enough", and wanting to present themselves in a way that communicates to and attracts other queer people/people of the same gender. I know I personally struggle with this and have friends who have asked on multiple occasions when going out, if they "look gay", specially with them considering themselves bisexual (and this is a whole other topic with bisexual people not feeling like they're gay enough, which only adds to the "looking" part of it). Continuing the author's track of thought and talking more specifically about women, if you're too feminine people will automatically assume you're straight, since you don't look gay, but if you're too masculine and very obviously like women, then you must surely just want to be a man to then be involved with women. Queerness is always being erased here and the norm/only way of thinking continues to be heterosexuality.

    Really enjoying the way Minnie talks about her struggles in this topic and the different opinions that the people around her have and how it affects her.

    7
    comments 0
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on a post

    1d
  • The Lion and the Deathless Dark
    Predictions and fun guesses (spoilers for all previous books and things mentioned by Carissa on social media)
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    4
    comments 5
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on MysteriousJellyfish's review of Man, Fuck This House

    1d
  • Man, Fuck This House
    Oct 04, 2025
    3.0
    Enjoyment: 4.0Quality: 4.0Characters: 4.0Plot: 2.5
    🏠
    👨‍👩‍👧‍👦

    What in the ever loving fuck did I just read 😶

    8
    comments 4
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on kittytornado's update

    kittytornado started reading...

    1d
    Don't Let the Forest In

    Don't Let the Forest In

    C.G. Drews

    18
    2
    Reply

    minsuni commented on hannah's update

    hannah earned a badge

    1d
    Level 7

    Level 7

    5000 points

    71
    16
    Reply

    minsuni commented on a post

    1d
  • Only TBR🥲

    I SWEAR I READ SAPPHIC ROMANCE THEY JUST ARENT ON HERE I SWEARRRR

    29
    comments 7
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum

    1d
  • seema
    Edited
    Page Against the Machine

    I was so delighted to see this newsletter come in, really excited for what's to come from it!! I think from the things listed, I'm by far the most excited for getting the behind the scenes look at how on EARTH Lucy and Jennifer have made all of this happen!

    ETA: oh my god this explains why I didn't see any other posts about it, hello who else received this?? It was from pageboundapp@substack.com?? It just said at the top I received the email bc I had created an account on Pagebound web (ages ago)??

    Omg I desperately hope I'm not stealing the PB teams thunder I fully believed everyone had received this 😭 it seems it's up to subscribe here https://pageboundapp.substack.com

    57
    comments 25
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum

    1d
  • How do you pick what book to read next when you don’t know which one to pick?

    I’m curious, I always try to have at least 5 books to choose from for my next read but sometimes I don’t know which one to pick, how do you usually pick?

    15
    comments 18
    Reply
  • Post from the S/He forum

    2d
  • S/He
    Thoughts from 9% (page 20/Gender Quiz)

    And we read the theories of women who had ideas about how to end the oppression of women as a sex.

    These women go on to propose that the best solution would be to fully eliminate men and women as a gender, embrace androgyny as opposed to someone being feminine/masculine and abolish any biological functions that would lead to any of these two genres. And the more I think about this, the more mad I get cause it still puts women as the problem, when we're the ones being oppressed. You can't just end any type of gender expression and expect people to follow what you show them, present an ideal and eliminate the reality and expect people to just change. People are feminine/masculine/androgynous because that's just who they are, who they were born as and who they feel most comfortable like. There's no new ideal that could change that. The author even gives the example of her two sons, who, at their own pace, started to show their "unique blend of masculine and feminine. Was it possible to train them into androgyny? Was this the skill they needed to take action against unjust power in the world?"

    It was what she said at the end that really brought everything together: "But my husband's penis was not dominating my life. Instead, I was concerned about the power of white men who interviewed me for possible jobs at large institutions and then protected their economic position by never hiring me."

    4
    comments 0
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on minsuni's review of Before the Coffee Gets Cold (Before the Coffee Gets Cold, #1)

    2d
  • Before the Coffee Gets Cold (Before the Coffee Gets Cold, #1)
    minsuni
    Oct 03, 2025
    3.0
    Enjoyment: 3.0Quality: 4.0Characters: 3.5Plot: 3.0
    👻
    🫂

    I mean, this was ok? Each story was interesting and emotional enough that it was enjoyable to read, but I also didn’t feel like it was anything that special that moved me or made me feel connected to the characters or story. The theme/lesson for each story also felt repetitive, with the “Mother and Child” being the most original and moving, where the characters all went to the past for the general same reason and learning the same lesson: don’t wait to say what you want because it might be too late.

    The way the women were narrated was a little yucky to me. They were jealous, childish, workaholics, with their soft skin and eyes that resembled the ones of a little girl, while the men were devoted to their work, romantic and caring and basically being praised for doing the bare minimum. The women changed their whole lives and did these grand gestures, while the men were just… there.

    15
    comments 8
    Reply