seema commented on emmaloy's review of Mrs. S
It really is the summer of pining queer woman reads
Difficult to review. I love a moody read. A slice of life, a character study. This one I actually enjoyed but it kept me at a distance. There’s some amazing lines in here, great ideas, devastating paragraphs and visions. The author writes with quick, short sentences, and it stays this way throughout the entire book. It’s tough because usually it’s hard to me to connect with writing like this, but at the same time, it made complete sense for the character. Felt like a journal of someone who is grasping at anything they can hold into, who’s trying to paint sexuality, obsession, attention, erotic tension, and change as something clear and controlled. Hard to connect with, but that’s what I admired about it in some twisted way. Would definitely recommend in a specific scenario, but not something anyone would enjoy. Glad I read it.
seema commented on Fantasy's review of Mrs. S
You can tell someone from the UK wrote this because the new-to-the-country Australian lesbian thought the British weather was hot
seema commented on Jake99's update
seema wrote a review...
It's easy to get swept into this book and along with it; it is at core a compelling character study of a woman, and her want, and the relationship between herself and her want. I liked the exploration of lesbianism and masculinity and chosen family and the narrator's transformation as she takes possession of herself. The narrative style is one I really enjoy, I found it to be reminiscent of Intermezzo, very blunt and no quotations to be found. That said, all the conditions should have been perfect for me to feel deeply invested, and yet I struggled with feeling a bit at arms length from the characters. I just wasn't feeling personally moved by the story, as much as I was just a witness to it. I had a lot of misgivings with the central relationship which made me pretty unenthusiastic through the entire first half, after that point things improved (especially because of the featured friendship moreso than the romantic relationship) but I still just found myself always wanting something more and feeling like I was turning pages never quite getting what I was looking for. Still, a really good book to read and reflect on your own queerness and gender and desire and selfhood, and I think it could land incredibly well for others who find themselves at a point in their lives where they relate to the narrator more.
seema finished a book

Mrs. S
K. Patrick
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seema commented on Lizzyfoureyes's update
seema started reading...

My Darling Dreadful Thing
Johanna van Veen
seema commented on lucyPagebound's update
seema commented on seema's update
seema TBR'd a book

Martyr!
Kaveh Akbar
seema commented on a post
And then she sees the girl on the bed.
Girl on the bed girl on the bed call me an owl the way I'm saying who who who
seema commented on a post