Whatcha Reading? July 2025, Part Two

Jul. 26th, 2025 07:00 am
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Posted by Amanda

Ship or luxury white boat lay on sand beach, skyline background. After storm always return sun. Yacht on st.johns beach. Entertainment summer vacation yachting. Boat yacht landed on sand coast.It’s our last Whatcha Reading of July. Here’s what we’re reading as we reach the end of the month:

Lara: Inspired by my best friend, I’ve been reading old Tessa Dare books obsessively and voraciously. It has brought me a tremendous amount of comfort with trumpetings of Good Book Noise.

Shana: I’m reading Single Player by Tara Tai. ( A | BN | K | AB ) I love the setting—a queer romance in a video game company—but I’m feeling kind of meh about enemies to lovers romances these days.

Amanda: I couldn’t get into The Governess Game by Tessa Dare. The heroine meets the hero for all of five minutes and spends her days fantasizing about marrying him. I’ve moved onto King of Wrath by Ana Huang, and that’s hitting much better. The dark and dark-adjacent romances are really doing it for me right now.

Susan: I’m reading The Silent Concubine by Qiang Tang and Bai Li Jun Xi, ( A | BN ) and I’m not sure how I feel about it. The translation is Bad, and the protagonist is both passive and oblivious, which is a bad combo in a palace intrigue book.

But the love interest is unhinged and I do want more queer palace intrigues, so…

Relationship Material
A | BN | K
Update: protagonist has lost his temper, none of the love interests were prepared for this

Sarah: I read Liars Like Us ( A | BN ) and the romance was missing from my romance novel. You know the unclean hands doctrine, where evidence is declared inadmissible because the means of acquiring it weren’t valid? This guy has, forgive me, unclean peen. Not that his peen is itself unclean (there is at least one shower scene) but everything about this relationship is supremely fucked because of how it began.

There was a lot of horniness though.

Elyse: I finally had to DNF Soulgazer ( A | BN | K | AB ) because after six chapters I still didn’t understand the magic system or the world. It felt like a lot of Romantasy word salad.

Lara: You lasted longer than I did. I made it about a chapter before I gave up.

Tara: I’m reading Relationship Material by Rachel Spangler and I’m enjoying it. It’s an f/nb romance and the author is nonbinary.

Susan: I’m also reading a webtoon called Sealed With Lips, and it’s very silly. The protagonist is on a revenge spree after being reborn, and there are regular reveals of new Horrors that she’s been through. But she and the love interest match each other’s level of ruthless and vengeful, and it’s very dramatic with all of the face-slapping, so I’m enjoying it

Whatcha reading? Let us know in the comments!

2025 Candidate Q&A and Chat Round Up

Jul. 25th, 2025 03:27 pm
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Organization for Transformative Works: Election News

The election season is in full swing! As part of the election season, we have a chat with our candidates coming up soon. You can also find links to the candidates' answers to your questions at the bottom of this post.

Chats

There will be one public chat with all three candidates that will last 90 minutes. Chats will take place in our public chatroom (Discord).
It is scheduled for:

During this chat, chat attendees will have the opportunity to ask the candidates questions not already covered in their platforms, bios, and Q&A, as well as to ask individual questions of specific candidates. New questions will only be accepted for the first hour of the scheduled chat time to make sure candidates have time to finish them all.

We hope that you can join us for this chat!

Please note that though the link to the public chatroom is already active, chatting capabilities will not be enabled until approximately half an hour before the chat begins.

Read on to learn more about using Discord.

  • On the login page, you'll need to provide a screen name.
  • Once you enter the server, you'll find a list of users on the right and a list of chat rooms on the left. Settings are available via the gear icon on the lower left, near your screen name; there you can choose, among other options, whether you prefer a dark or light chat room appearance.
  • There are three rooms available to chat attendees who are not candidates or Elections Committee volunteers: general, candidate_chats, and open_chat.
    • General is where you'll find a list of rules for the chats. Please read through these carefully before entering the other two rooms.
    • Candidate_chats is where the candidates will answer questions and debate amongst themselves. Only the candidates and moderator will be able to chat in this room.
    • Open_chat is where all attendees can participate and talk to each other. We ask that you try to stay on topics related to the election. A moderator will be in the room, so if you have a question for the candidates, you can signal the moderator with o/, the candidate's name, and the question. Use o// if it's a follow-up question to the current discussion.

Q&A

When we posted the Board candidates’ bios and platforms, we asked the public to submit additional questions for them. Once again, our sincere thanks to everyone who did so! We have already posted candidate answers to Q&A questions.

To navigate answers by individual candidate, please use the links below:


The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan-run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

chipwich ice cream cake

Jul. 25th, 2025 06:15 pm
[syndicated profile] smittenkitchen_feed

Posted by deb

High on the list of cooking things that I’ve got far more opinions on than anyone has ever asked of me (and may have even, at times, prayed I’d stop yapping about), are homemade ice cream sandwiches. Why? Because it’s devastating when you realize something that should bring us nothing but incandescent summer joy — ice cream! cookies! — rarely work as well as promised. Most cookies become so hard once frozen, you feel like you’re breaking a tooth with each bite. Unyielding cookies also squeeze the ice cream out the sides, leading to drips down your arms and an immediate bad mood (for adults; kids, naturally, love it). While writing Smitten Kitchen Keepers, I became obsessed with creating a deeply nostalgic homemade chipwich-style ice cream sandwich that did everything right and I had three big a-ha moments along the way:

Read more »

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Posted by John Scalzi

Doesn’t she look happy? Of course she does. Her life is pretty sweet, after all, lots of love and walks and rolls in the grass. It’s good to be a pup.

Also, for those who don’t know, yes, indeed, I do officiate weddings! It’s for friends and such. I mean, I was probably going to be at the wedding anyway. Why not make myself useful.

We’ll be back on Monday. Until then, have a fabulous weekend, and if you’re in part of the US currently under a heat dome, keep yourself cool and remember to hydrate, okay? Thank you.

— JS

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archive - contact - sexy exciting merchandise - search - about
July 25th, 2025next

July 25th, 2025: I'm at San Diego Comic Con today and tomorrow! In Room 6A I'll be on the FANTASTIC FOUR panel at 2:30, and then the NEXT BIG THING panel at 3:30 (same room!). And on Saturday I've a signing from 10-12 at booth 4901 - hope to see you there!

– Ryan

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Posted by Amanda

Apples Dipped in Gold

Apples Dipped in Gold by Scarlett St. Clair is $1.99! This is book two in the Fairy Tale Retellings series, though I can’t quite place which fairy tale it’s based on or just an amalgamation of a few.

Orphaned at a young age, Samara is left under the care of her three, horrible brothers. Just when she thinks she cannot take another day of their abuse, a handsome prince offers for her hand in marriage.

Samara’s brothers agree in exchange for a large dowery but on her way to her new kingdom, her carriage is ambushed by Lore, the wicked Prince of Nightshade.

Samara believes that the fae has snatched away her chance at freedom to punish her for her crimes against his kind but punishment is only half of Lore’s plan.

The truth is that the Elven Prince has pined after Samara for seven long years. She is all he can think about—a toxin in his blood. Can the Prince of Nightshade, whose power over poisons rivals none in The Enchanted Forest, manage to find a remedy or will he succumb to her love?

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

The Scenic Route

The Scenic Route by Katie Ruggle is $1.99! This is book one in a new series by Ruggle and features a forced proximity romance. Has this one been on your radar?

Why date a mountain man? Because climbing him will leave you breathless.

Felicity Pax loves her job. She craves excitement, and being a bounty hunter gives her that in spades. So when her estranged mother disappears with a small fortune in tow, Felicity chases her like she would any other skip. Too bad she didn’t barter on having increasingly infuriating (and infuriatingly hot) PI Bennett Green on her tail.

Bennett’s got a job to do, and if that means shadowing Felicity…well…he’s had worse assignments. Even if he’s 99% sure the increasingly intriguing bounty hunter is leading him on a wild goose chase through the Rockies.

If she has to drag her PI tail through endless quirky mountain towns in order to shake him, that’s what she’s determined to do…but it isn’t long before Felicity’s intended distraction turns up a mystery worth solving—and Bennett becomes the unexpected partner she never realized she needed. As things heat up, Felicity will have to decide what’s most important to staying one step ahead of the “enemy” or giving herself freedom to experience the adventure of a lifetime.

The Rocky Mountains get unBEARably hot in Katie Ruggle’s brand-new series packed with adventure, action, tall dark & scruffy heroes, and a sense of quirky humor that will be your next perfect escape.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

The Viscount’s Unconventional Lady

The Viscount’s Unconventional Lady by Virginia Heath is $1.99! This was previously published in 2021, so make sure you don’t already have it. This is book one in The Talk of the Beau Monde series and I certainly don’t like that cover.

The notorious viscount

And the most gossiped-about lady…

After years as a diplomat in the Napoleonic Wars, Lord Eastwood is reluctant to return to London society. His scandalous divorce has made him infamous, not to mention cantankerous! To halt the rumor mill, he should marry a quiet noblewoman—instead it’s bold, vibrant artist Faith Brookes who’s caught his attention. They are the least suitable match, so why is he like a moth to a flame?

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

Something Extraordinary

RECOMMENDED: Something Extraordinary by Alexis Hall is $1.99! We had a squee guest review for this one:

Something Extraordinary is loaded with fun, with love, with passion and with devotion. Love comes in all shapes, sizes and flavors. This is the one that tastes like heaven.

From the author of Boyfriend Material comes the absurdist adventure of two friends determined to avoid marriage to unsuitable people as they race through Regency England to marry each other instead.

Sir Horley Comewithers isn’t particularly interested in getting married, especially when his match is a perfectly respectable young woman. Sir Horley is, after all, extravagantly gay. But he’s resigned to a fate there’s no point resisting—until a dear friend does it for him.

Arabella Tarleton has no interest in romance, but even she can see that Sir Horley’s nuptials are destined to end in a lifetime of misery. Well, not on her watch. And what are friends for, if not abducting you on your wedding night in an overdramatic attempt to save you from a terrible mistake?

Their journey to Gretna Green is a hodgepodge of colorful run-ins and near misses with questionable innkeepers, amateur highwaymen, overattentive writers, and scorned fiancées. Then again a bumpy road is better than an unhappy destination.

But when it comes to marriage, Belle and Sir Horley are about to discover that it’s not what you do or how you do it but the people who you choose to do it with that matter most.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

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Posted by SB Sarah

Everyone is Lying to You
A | BN | K | AB
Jo Piazza’s new book, Everyone is Lying to You, is a trad wife influencer murder mystery out this month. I loved this book. Jo has been covering trad wives and influencers for a long, long time – she has a podcast called “Under the Influence,” and has been writing about celebrity culture for most of her career.

We are talking about trad wives, celebrity influencers, and how celebrity has changed with social media. We also talk about how and why trad wife influencers are so, well, influential, and how so many parts of our society have let women down.

Want some fresh burning feminism and critique of predatory influencing? This is your episode.

Inspired by other Patreon folks, including Chris DeRosa at Fixing Famous People, I’ve made some of the Patreon content free so you can sample what we’ve got.

This collection of special previews is available now to all listeners, and there’s a link in the show notes to dive in. And if you like our free samples, join us in the Patreon community where there’s bonus content and more.

Listen to the podcast →
Read the transcript →

Here are the books we discuss in this podcast:

You can find Jo Piazza – and her book tour! – at her website JoPiazza.com. Her podcast is Under the Influence.

We also mentioned:

If you like the podcast, you can subscribe to our feed, or find us at iTunes. You can also find us on Stitcher, and Spotify, too. We also have a cool page for the podcast on iTunes.

More ways to sponsor:

Sponsor us through Patreon! (What is Patreon?)

What did you think of today's episode? Got ideas? Suggestions? You can talk to us on the blog entries for the podcast or talk to us on Facebook if that's where you hang out online. You can email us at sbjpodcast@gmail.com or you can call and leave us a message at our Google voice number: 201-371-3272. Please don't forget to give us a name and where you're calling from so we can work your message into an upcoming podcast.

Thanks for listening!

Remember to subscribe to our podcast feed, find us on iTunes or on Stitcher.

Two more wedding letters

Jul. 24th, 2025 03:14 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
1. Dear Care and Feeding,

I’m getting married next year, and my mom is helping me with a lot of the planning. She’s great at this stuff, and super excited to help (and I’m glad to have her—she’s one of my best friends!). But we’re worried about squabbling—or to be honest, yelling at each other—during the process. We’re VERY close, but prone to fighting about nonsense things. Any tips for avoiding a repeat of my (very loud) teenage years while we plan?

—My Fiancé is Very Calm, By the Way


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**************


2. Dear Prudence,

I am an only child and my mother has always been … let’s call it “involved” with my life, and I have done my best to deal with it. Two years ago, I met my now-fiancée, “Arista,” and we are getting married in November. Last week, my mother came to me demanding that I call off our engagement. As it turns out, she had had a professional background check done on Arista, and she really did not like what she’d found.

After her little snoop-about, my mother discovered that she used to be in adult entertainment. The thing is, Arista was up front with me about this early on in our relationship and it doesn’t matter to me. However, I had intended to not say anything to my mother because I knew she would react like this, but more importantly, it wasn’t her business.

When I told my mom as much, she blew up and told me that I couldn’t sully our family by “marrying a whore.” I told her this wasn’t her decision and that she could either treat my future wife with the respect and decency she deserves or sit out the wedding. Now she’s told everyone in the family. Many are supportive and think she’s nuts, but some have shared her reaction. Is this grounds for removing her from my life for good?

—Pilloried By the Past


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(no subject)

Jul. 24th, 2025 03:06 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
My mother-in-law, “Hannah,” is a retired pediatrician, and self-appointed captain of our kids’ health care. Whenever we take our kids to the doctor, we have to have a post-visit debrief with Hannah, who demands every detail before offering her own (unsolicited) advice. Often, her advice contradicts the pediatrician’s recommendations, and she will get upset when we take the doctor’s side over hers.

My husband, “Tom,” says it’s better to humor her and pay lip-service to following her recommendations. I get that it’s his mom, but I’m the one fielding the questions! (Tom does what he can, but I’m usually the one taking them to the doctor and talking to her after.) I’m just sick and tired of dealing with this.

—Enough


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firebatvillain: Drawing of a hand in darkness, holding a ball of fire. (Default)
[personal profile] firebatvillain posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
Dear Carolyn: I have five children, two daughters. “Lynn” is 40, and “Emma” is 29. Lynn got married 15 years ago, and since she was the first bride of the younger generation, a big fuss was made over her wedding by me, my two sisters and especially my mother.

Emma is getting married next month, but since she is the fifth and last bride in our family, it’s not as big a deal. That’s the way it was in the previous generation, too, because this happened to my sister, the sixth bride that time around.

Complicating matters is the fact that Lynn is a stay-at-home mom of four whose husband recently left her for another woman. She is in a tailspin and requiring a lot of support. The whole family of women are pulling together for her, cooking, cleaning, taking turns sleeping at her house, etc. Except for my mom, we all have full-time jobs, which two of us didn’t have 15 years ago.

All that leaves us with little time or energy to focus on Emma’s wedding, which I thought she would understand. When she asked when we would all be making the usual desserts and decorations for the reception, no one felt they could commit.

Emma was hurt and pointed out what everyone did for Lynn, but we can’t even “do the minimum” for her. I was blindsided by her anger. I’m sorry we did more for her sister and cousins, but Lynn has the greater need right now.

I told Emma her father and I are paying for everything just like we did for her sister, and she could ask her friends to help.

Am I/are we being unfair to Emma?

— Blindsided

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Headache, by Tom Zeller, Jr

Jul. 24th, 2025 10:24 am
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


A solid, well-written, and generally engaging book about migraine and cluster headaches. The author suffers from the latter, with suffer being the operative word - cluster headaches are called "suicide headaches" because people with them are known to kill themselves because of the intractable, excruciating pain.

The first-person account was the best part of the book: what it's like to have cluster headaches, how you're driven to hoard medication because you're not allowed to have enough (which leads doctors to view you with suspicion as a drug-seeker - NO SHIT you seek painkillers when you're in pain!), how you cling to any doctor who will take you seriously, and the psychology of chronic pain generally.

(In Zeller's case, he wasn't seeking opiods or anything that could get him high, but a medication that does nothing to anyone but stop cluster headaches if you have one. But his doctor didn't believe that he actually got them as often as he did, and his insurance company didn't want to pay out for his medication, so he was forced to hoard and ration his medication for no good reason, and then looked at with suspicion when he asked for more.)

The book gets a bit into the weeds in terms of the biological mechanism of cluster and migraine headaches, which is not yet known, and the reasons why there's little research or funding devoted to them. But overall, a good book that will make people with chronic headaches, or any chronic pain, feel seen.
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Posted by Amanda

Greenteeth

Greenteeth by Molly O’Neill is $2.99! Carrie reviewed this one in April and gave it a C:

The descriptive aspects of this book are great. I just wish that the character development was stronger on the part of everyone not named Jenny, and that the plot had more focus.

From an outstanding new voice in cozy fantasy comes Greenteeth, a  tale of fae, folklore, and found family, narrated by a charismatic lake-dwelling monster with a voice unlike any other, perfect for fans of T. Kingfisher.

Beneath the still surface of a lake lurks a monster with needle sharp teeth. Hungry and ready to pounce.

Jenny Greenteeth has never spoken to a human before, but when a witch is thrown into her lake, something makes Jenny decide she’s worth saving. Temperance doesn’t know why her village has suddenly turned against her, only that it has something to do with the malevolent new pastor.

Though they have nothing in common, these two must band together on a magical quest to defeat the evil that threatens Jenny’s lake and Temperance’s family, as well as the very soul of Britain.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

On Her Terms

On Her Terms by Amy Spalding is $3.99! This is book three in the Out in Hollywood series, which features f/f romances with one (or both) of the main characters working in Hollywood. Have you read any books in the series?

A fresh, funny contemporary romance about being true to yourself and your desires, even if it means plunging into uncharted territory . . .

Fresh off breaking up with her boyfriend and swerving away from the conventional, TikTok-ready married life she never wanted, Clementine is ready to explore the alternatives. Not that she wants to be single forever, much less die alone. But at thirty-six, it’s time for her to experience new things—including in her love life. And though an invitation to a fake relationship to appease family sounds like a recipe for disaster, Clem finds herself saying yes to smart, spirited dog groomer Chloe Lee anyway . . .

Chloe is long past her own baby gay era, but even before they’ve tackled Clem’s parents’ anniversary party and Chloe’s friend’s wedding, the two of them end up spending a lot of time together. As the attraction between them grows stronger, it all begins to feel pretty real to Clem. Chloe, however, is fine as just friends—plus she’s convinced Clem is just eager for “someone” to take her off the singles list. How to persuade her otherwise? After all, Clem is starting to realize her life is wonderfully full and being “alone” doesn’t scare her a bit. Still, being without the tiny powerhouse that is Chloe, specifically? That’s a whole other story . . .

Wise, witty, and full of heart, here is an uplifting love story with an ending worth waiting for.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

Recipe for a Charmed Life

Recipe for a Charmed Life by Rachel Linden is $1.99! I’d classify this as more chick lit/women’s fiction with a romantic subplot. Linden also writes books that typically have a ton of foodie elements. Maybe don’t read while hungry.

After a day of unrivaled disappointments, a promising young chef finds every bite of food suddenly tastes bitter. To save her career, she travels to the Pacific Northwest to reconnect with her estranged mom, and discovers a family legacy she never suspected in this delicious novel from the bestselling author of The Magic of Lemon Drop Pie.

American chef Georgia May Jackson has one goal—to run her own restaurant in Paris. After a grueling decade working in Parisian kitchens, she is on the cusp of success. But in one disastrous night, Georgia loses her sous-chef position, her French boyfriend, and her sense of taste! Renowned for her refined palate and daring use of bold flavors to create remarkable dishes, Georgia is devastated to discover her culinary gift has simply…vanished.

When she receives a surprising invitation from her estranged mother, Georgia flees to a small island near Seattle hoping the visit will help her regain her spark in the kitchen. There she tentatively reconnects with her mom, a free-spirited hippie eager to make up for her past mistakes. But there’s something about the enigmatic island Georgia just can’t piece together. Good luck charms keep appearing in the oddest places. Her neighbor is a puzzlingly antagonist (and annoyingly handsome) oyster farmer. And her mom keeps hinting at a mysterious family legacy.

With the clock ticking and time running out to win her dream job in Paris, Georgia begins to unravel some astonishing secrets that make her wonder if the true recipe for a charmed life might look—and taste—very different than she ever imagined.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

Some Like It Scandalous

Some Like It Scandalous by Maya Rodale is $1.99! This is the second book in Rodale’s historical romance series set in Gilded Age New York. Aarya gave this one a C-, but notes your mileage may vary depending on how you feel about certain tropes.

They are sworn enemies… 

Theodore Prescott the Third, one of Manhattan’s Rogues of Millionaire Row, has really done it this time. The only way to survive his most recent, unspeakably outrageous scandal is marry someone respectable. Someone sensible. Someone like Daisy Swan. Of all the girls in Gilded Age Manhattan, it had to be her.

Pretending to be lovers… 

Daisy Swan has plans and they do not involve a loveless marriage with anyone. But when a devastating family secret threatens to destroy her standing in society, suddenly a fake engagement with Theo is just the thing to make all her dreams come true.

And now it’s time to kiss and make up… 

Daisy Swan aspires to sell cosmetics that she has created, but this brainy scientist needs a smooth talking charmer’s flair for words and eye for beauty to make it a success. Before long, Daisy and Theo are trading kisses. And secrets. And discovering that despite appearances, they might be the perfect couple after all.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

Love is a War Song by Danica Nava

Jul. 24th, 2025 08:00 am
[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by Shana

B

Love is a War Song

by Danica Nava
July 22, 2025 · Berkley
Contemporary RomanceWesternRomance

Love is a War Song is a fun sunshine/grumpy/fish out of water romance with a New Adult feel. While the romance is fun, the cultural representation is what sets this novel apart from others.

Here’s the publisher’s plot description:

Pop singer Avery Fox has become a national joke after posing scantily clad on the cover of Rolling Stone in a feather warbonnet. What was meant to be a statement of her success as a Native American singer has turned her into a social pariah and dubbed her a fake. With threats coming from every direction and her career at a standstill, she escapes to her estranged grandmother Lottie’s ranch in Oklahoma. Living on the rez is new to Avery—not only does she have to work in the blazing summer heat to earn her keep, but the man who runs Lottie’s horse ranch despises her and wants her gone.

Red Fox Ranch has been home to Lucas Iron Eyes since he was sixteen years old. He has lived by three rules to keep himself out of trouble: 1) preserve the culture, 2) respect the horses, and 3) stick to himself. When he is tasked with picking up Lottie’s granddaughter at the bus station, the last person he expected to see is the Avery Fox. Lucas can’t stand what she represents, but when he’s forced to work with her on the ranch, he can’t get her out of his sight—or his head. He reminds himself to keep to his rules, especially after he finds out the ranch is under threat of being shut down.

It’s clear Avery doesn’t belong here, but they form a tentative truce and make a deal. Avery will help raise funds to save the ranch, and in exchange, Lucas will show her what it really means to be an Indian. It’s purely transactional, absolutely no horsing around…but where’s the fun in that?

Carrie: This is told from Avery’s point of view, and she’s a funny, engaging heroine, if one who is almost shockingly naive given her profession. Avery is in her early 20s and has spent her life being ‘managed’ by her mother. Her mother has controlled Avery’s personal and professional life since Avery became a child actor, and signed her up with an agent and label that refuses to allow Avery to release her own music (she is a songwriter). A lot of this book is about Avery’s journey to find her own self and claim both responsibility for and agency over her own life.

Shana: Avery is marketed as a Native American pop star, but her mother refuses to tell her much about her culture. After Avery is forced to release the single “I Need a Warrior” instead of her own music she agrees to dress in offensive outfits for her music video and her Rolling Stone cover because she thinks she is doing something subversive – ironically reclaiming American Indian stereotypes by wearing a leather bikini and cultural artifacts. What made Avery likable is that when her mistakes are made clear, she quickly regrets them, even if some of the claims against her—like being a Pretendian—aren’t true.

Carrie: Unfortunately she lacks the common sense, the independence, or the knowledge required to see why her artistic choices were a problem. One thing that speaks in Avery’s favor immediately is that she is only defensive about this when confronted by a man she’s never met before who mocks her the second she gets off a miserable bus ride from Los Angeles to Oklahoma. The rest of the time, Avery is ready to learn, whether it’s about her culture, her family history, or how to clean a horse stall.

The man who makes fun of her is, of course, Lucas, and of course they fall in love over the course of the book. There’s a trend lately to have romances with only one point-of-view character, and it works fine if we think of the books as a novel about the POV character with a strong romantic element. Taken as a Romance Novel ™, I dislike this trend because I find that the non-POV character ends up being less well-developed leading to a less well-balanced romance. Lucas is an interesting person. He’s been through a lot and he has a generous and loyal heart and big but also realistic and well-thought out plans. But his character arc is from “I don’t like her” to “I love her”. I would have loved to have some time from his POV, and for him to have had a more developed story.

Shana: I usually grumble about single-POV romances, but I didn’t mind it so much here. Enemies to Lovers isn’t my favorite trope, and at first it felt like Lucas was negging Avery so I was happy not to be inside his head for that nonsense. I was overjoyed when Lucas and Avery’s animosity simmered down and the two of them started working together on the ranch.

I liked uncovering the mystery of Lucas’s backstory alongside Avery…and there were quite a few surprises to unpack along the way. One of my favorite moments was when Lucas, a seemingly solipsistic small town boy who has never left Oklahoma, admits that he’d love to visit Machu Picchu to see something built by Indigenous people that hasn’t been destroyed. My man had layers. And the more I learned about him, the more he seemed right for Avery.

Even though Lucas is also in his 20s, he seemed much older than Avery. He steps in to rescue her when she can’t cook, drive a truck, or fix a songwriting problem. I think readers who enjoy a slight age gap with a wiser hero and younger heroine might like Lucas and Avery’s dynamic. For me, Avery seemed emotionally immature at times.

Avery has a lot to learn about Muscogee culture and rural life. She makes hilarious mistakes and Lucas is a gentle teacher, even when he’s teasing her.  Early on Lucas nearly convinces Avery that the tribe can tell time down to the minute based on the color of the sunrise. He quickly fesses up, and warns her not to be as naive around tribal elders who like to joke around. As someone who has repeatedly fallen for the tall tales of uncles, I can confirm this is sound advice. What keeps Avery from TSTL territory is that she’s a quick learner around the ranch and a fantastic musician. She’s a Fish out of Water but not totally incompetent. And that leads to plenty of fun banter between her and her new ranch family.

Carrie: I wanted to see a LOT more about the relationship between Avery’s mother and her grandmother, Lottie. There’s some discussion that maybe Lottie wasn’t such a great mom, and there’s discussion that her mother might go through some redemption once Avery stands up to her, but it’s barely touched upon.

Shana: Totally. I kept thinking the story would dig into generational trauma but there’s a lot that’s left unspoken between the lines. Avery learns to set boundaries, but the adults in her life don’t magically change into healed, excellent communicators.  I ultimately enjoyed that the book doesn’t dwell on Bad Mom behavior and kept the tone lighthearted, but I would have liked a real showdown between Avery’s mom and grandma.

Carrie: This book works because it’s wonderful to see the Muscogee Cree people represented not as some sort of mythical figures but as fully modern day people with a strong sense of heritage and culture. It’s also lovely to see a story in which Native American communities have challenges, but are also depicted as places of strong community and joy.

It also works as a coming-of-age story: Avery is able to develop a strong sense of independence and integrity as well as a sense of being surrounded by a community that cares about her as a person, not her as a performer. While I thought she and Lucas were a great pairing and I very much enjoyed their scenes together, it doesn’t work fully as a Romance Novel ™ for me because we never get Lucas’ POV. Overall, however, I found this book to be highly enjoyable.

Shana: I have a soft spot for untraditional cowboy romances, and this is the best one I’ve read in years. It has all the texture I love in a ranch setting, softly worn work shirts, a sweeping big sky, buttery biscuits, and a slow smile under a tipped hat. But my favorite part is how Avery isn’t forced to choose between her dreams and love. She doesn’t have to make herself small to appreciate small town life.

Readers who are fans of enemies to lovers stories, or books where celebrities learn to live like regular people might like this a lot, but it’s especially welcoming to readers who want more romances with Indigenous characters crafted by Indigenous writers. The tropes are familiar, but the characters and their community make this book very, very special.

The Big Idea: Payton McCarty-Simas

Jul. 24th, 2025 12:36 pm
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Posted by Athena Scalzi

It may not be Halloween, but that shouldn’t stop you from learning about the history of depictions of witches throughout the decades in film and media. Author and witch-film-connoisseur Payton McCarty-Simas is here today to take you through a wild ride (on a broomstick) over feminism, horror, and women, in her new book, That Very Witch: Fear, Feminism, and the American Witch Film.

PAYTON MCCARTY-SIMAS:

More than anything else, my book, That Very Witch: Fear, Feminism, and the American Witch Film, is the product of hundreds of hours spent watching movies. I started the project that eventually became this book in college–– or, more specifically, during COVID, revisiting some of my comfort movies during lockdown. As I worked my way through more recent favorites like The Witch and Color Out of Space and old standbys like Rosemary’s Baby and George Romero’s Season of the Witch, I started noticing visual and thematic patterns. Soon, I was hooked on witch films (though as my list of favorites might suggest I always have been), and I started watching in earnest. 

The big idea of That Very Witch is that, by tracing how depictions of witches evolve and change in American horror cinema over time, we can learn about the state of feminism in a given moment, essentially taking the cultural temperature in the process. I trace specific threads through the decades––namely psychedelic imagery, counterculturalism, and feminine rage among others––but each and every smaller idea relied on a huge amount of cinematic data to really put my finger on. I watched over three hundred hours of film for this project, noting different patterns and shifts from decade to decade over hundreds of pages of notes, several Letterboxd lists, and a slightly unhinged-looking conspiracy board. 

While all genres move in cycles that capitalize on trends––consider the YA dystopian romance boom that followed The Hunger Games––horror is particularly trenchant given the films’ consistent popularity, relatively low budgets, and quick turnarounds. Simply put, the industry makes a lot of horror movies looking for a quick buck, and, given that profit-motive, producers are always responding to popular demand for a given subject. The terrifying proto-viral success of The Blair Witch Project gives us an explosion of found footage horror, and eventually the runaway blockbuster that was Paranormal Activity, which in turn gives us a rash of suburban hauntings, and so on. As scholars like Robin Wood have long suggested, then, horror can be viewed as an extension of our collective unconscious (in his words our “collective nightmares”), our national fears made manifest at the intersection of broad commercial incentives, personal artistic impulses, and the zeitgeist. 

When it comes to witches, I noticed that in moments of high-profile feminist activism, say, the 1960s or the 2010s, witches become more popular––and more frightening––on screen. That’s not to say that witches disappear in other eras, far from it. But the characters of those depictions take on different tones and valences depending on the politics and trends of the moment, and that’s just as indicative of the politics of the age. Witches can be mall goths or hippie chicks, old women in pointy hats or teenage girls in low-rise jeans and lip gloss (or all of the above!) depending on the decade. They can be frightening or funny or fierce. But it takes a lot of hours of films, not to mention countless hours of historical research, to understand what depictions are most common when, and why. 


That Very Witch: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Bookshop |Kobo|Waterstones

Author’s socials: Website|Instagram|Tumblr|Letterboxd

Read an excerpt.

The Rec League: Awkward Sex

Jul. 24th, 2025 08:00 am
[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by Amanda

The Rec League - heart shaped chocolate resting on the edge of a very old bookThis Rec League came from our staff reviewer Shana:

Have we done a Rec League on books where the couple’s first time having sex is awkward or bad and they had to learn how to give each other pleasure? I feel like I remember us talking about those romances but I’m not sure what we might have called the Rec League. I love historical married couple romances, and this trope feels somewhat adjacent.

Carrie: Jennifer Crusie does this a lot – a good example is in Trust Me On This ( A | BN | K | G | AB | Au ) where the first sex is meh but as they start to trust each other the sex gets better and better.

Amanda: It’s been awhile since I’ve read it, but I believe the main couple in Sweet Filthy Boy by Christina Lauren had some awkwardness.

A Lady Awakened
A | BN | K | AB
Sarah: A Lady Awakened by Cecilia Grant fits this VERY well.

The Bromance Book Club but I’m not sure if specifics count as too much of a spoiler.

And Girl Gone Viral by Alisha Rai

Amanda, what about The Bride Test?

Amanda: Hm…I honestly can’t remember? I don’t think so. There’s a lot of awkwardness in general about being around each other, but I don’t remember the sex scenes being awkward. (Commenters please chime in!)

Susan: One of Courtney Milan’s definitely fits this – The Duchess War?

Claudia: You are right, Susan — famously bad first sex.

What romances would you recommend? Drop them in the comments!

[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by John Scalzi

A starred review means the Library Journal found The Shattering Peace particularly noteworthy, which makes me happy. The review is here, but I’ll quote the last line: “Highly recommended for readers who love broad sweeping space operas and science fiction with a high quotient of dry humor and witty sarcasm.” I bet that’s you, isn’t it?

Also, a lovely review of When the Moon Hits Your Eye in the Seattle Times, in which the reviewer says that they admire me “for my impressive ability to make readers laugh out loud and then realize mid-chuckle that there are larger, deeper themes at play.” It’s nice when reviewers pick up on that.

— JS

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