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crybabybea finished a book

Gender Euphoria
Laura Kate Dale
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seema commented on seema's review of A Prayer for the Crown-Shy (Monk & Robot, #2)
An absolutely stunning sequel that I managed to enjoy even more than A Psalm for the Wild-Built. This book served almost as a mirror to the last, now exploring return after departure, which wasn't just structurally satisfying but fit so naturally into the theme of natural cycles explored in the series. Just again a really beautiful and gentle exploration of how we fit into the world and what choices are ours to make as we evolve. In many ways it felt like a meditation, which I absolutely love. At a technical level I also just could not stop being impressed by Chambers and how well and creatively she depicted Mosscap seeing the human world for the first time, and how she folded in so much legitimately funny humor to achieve a perfect balance with the philosophical. Absolute comfort read I could actually imagine myself returning to (which I don't say often).
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as a neurodivergent woman, it's a bit scary how much of a mirror some of marie and sadie's traits are for my own childhood behaviours. i mean, we've got:
β befriending animals β feeling sympathetic for inanimate objects β wanting to wear the same thing everyday β being very quiet and scaring people who didn't realise you were there β reading huge books at a young age β being a quick learner in some subjects but despising the subjects that don't come naturally β preferring conversations with adults because you feel intellectually superior β desiring praise β being emotionally unpredictable
but THANKFULLY i can say the similarities end there, before we get into the habits of killing butterflies, hanging dolls with nooses and trustfalling off cliffs π¬
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I'm loving the sparse writing style. The choppy syntax makes the reading experience a little bit off-kilter because it's different than we're used to in this type of literature. This discomfort then pushes the reader to have a heightened sensitivity to just how off-kilter these girls already are. It's a great example of how diction and syntax can influence the tone of a piece of writing! (sorry I just got really AP-Lit-teacher there for a minute π )