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[personal profile] shadowkat
[As an aside, I need to update my icons again.]

One of the marvelous things about the internet and information age is now you can discover that writers, who you've been told to read various times in your lifetime (depending on how old you happen to be) but never actually got around to reading, are in actuality, racist assholes and you'd be better off avoiding entirely. Before the internet - you just did not have access to this information, well not unless you felt the need to do some digging at the local library and even then...

The latest in the "author's you must avoid due to their nasty tendencies" is Master Horror Fantasy Novelist HP Lovecraft. Shame the dude is long dead and can't defend himself. Most of them are, actually. That time period (late 19th-early 20th Century) tended to have a lot of racist writers. Why these tendencies weren't proclaimed when they were alive and kicking, I don't know - most likely the time period. Although to be fair in Lovecraft's case they aren't stating that you shouldn't read him, but that maybe he shouldn't be used to represent the world fantasy community. (Again why it took until now to figure this out...)

Speaking of time periods? The romance genre is similarly affected - novels written in the late 20th Century tended to be racist, sexist, and a bit violent. Novels written in the early part of the 20th Century were too, they just didn't have the sex scenes.
The 18th century - even more so, again no explicit sex scenes, well for the most part.
While novels written post 20th Century, are less so. Oh, the racism and sexism still exists, but there's more variety. In short? Some bright news...while our culture is still a wee bit racist and sexist for its own good, we are making quite a bit of progress. So, yay?

1. What I Just Finished Reading

Unclaimed by Courtney Milan - this was an odd romance novel - in that it tackled the concept of male chastity or virginity, although it really was more chastity, in a different way. I've read books with male virgins before - so that's hardly a new trope. Also with male virgins and courtesians - again not a new trope.
Should back up a bit - the novel is about a courtesian who is hired to ruin the reputation of Sir Mark Turner, who wrote The Gentlemen's Practical Guide to Chastity, and is a chaste, 28 year old virgin. Of course she falls in love with him. And much chaos ensues. What's different about it - is how the writer tackles this theme or trope. For one thing, she doesn't make fun of virginity. Or put it up on pedestal.
Or make it out to be a big deal. As the hero, Sir Mark, states - "I may be chaste, but I'm not dead." He's lustful and can kiss quite well thank you. There seems to be a misconception amongst the masses that you can only be great at sex if you have had a lot of it. Uhm no. There's quite a few folks out there having a lot of sex and not a whole lot of pleasure. And the reason that Sir Mark is chaste has very little to do with religion or propriety. He does not care that the heroine, Jessica, has had a lot of sex. Nor that she is not a virgin. He doesn't need her to have been chaste or pure. (Which is a bit subversive for this genre. Normally the guy cares about such things. In Judith McNaught's classic Whitney, My Love - the hero sort of rapes the heroine because he believes she isn't a virgin and gave herself to another man. That's an extreme case, but still.) Nor does he see a fallen woman as a man's downfall or blame the women for tempting him. As he states, "when you see a fallen woman, there's usually a man who pushed her." Which the heroine questions - as being a bit sexist, because doesn't the woman get a choice in the matter?

What I loved about this book is that the writer keeps asking questions. (Plus it was comforting, and I need comforting novels at the moment. Murder mysteries and horror tales aren't comforting to me. Hmmm... I'm wondering if I should highlight - "to me"? What is it about reviewing the romance genre that automatically puts one on the defensive? I think because we are shamed for reading them. People aren't for reading other genres, just romances. Not quite sure why this is - except blatant sexism? Because having read every genre on the planet, I can pretty much state that all of them have their pluses and minuses. But of the genres, the romance genre is the only one that tends to be written mainly for, about and by women.)

At any rate this novel didn't fall into cliche, and often went against it. Much like Unveiled, the previous novel in the series, the heroine saves herself and to a degree the hero. She resolves the problem and in an interesting and traditionally male way. Here she fights a duel, she's a better shot than any of the men in the story.

2. What I'm reading now?

Unraveled by Courtney Milan - the fourth and final novel in this series. This is about Magistrate Smite Turner, or Lord Justice, who was horribly abused by his mad mother - she locked him for months in the basement without food, he almost died - and when his younger brother rescued him - they lived off the streets in Bristol. She also beat him. As a result, Smite, has PTSD - post traumatic stress disorder, and is a bit OCD. (Each of the brothers in these novels have a name taken from a Bible verse, actually it's an entire verse in the Bible. Since you clearly can't go around town being called by the Bible verse - the name is a word or shortened version. The mother was a bit of a religious fanatic.)

The heroine is an actress, from a family of actors, who takes on various roles to get people off in the hero (Smite)'s court room for the mysterious Patron, who believes he's above the law and can get anyone off.

So...this should be intriguing. Courtney Milan - the novelist - has a background in science and law, and has done her research. Also like many romance novelists her focus is on class and sexism. She also discusses race.

3. What I'll be reading next?

Whatever I'm in the mood for. It may be Stealing Heaven by Madeline Hunter, the Raven Prince by Elizabeth Hoyt, or something else. It's not like I don't have over 300 books in my library to choose from. Plus the books in the boxes I'm currently using as a coffee table, and the one's on my shelves. I certainly don't lack for reading material, pleasurable or otherwise - and there's something for or rather to offend everyone.

Date: 2014-11-14 06:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shipperx.livejournal.com
I remember enjoying "Unclaimed" a great deal and thought Mark was yummy.

And now a rec with defensive caveats. ;)

I have Kindle Unlimited, which gives me access to more free books than the ones just listed as "free" (it overlaps with Prime but is not identical to prime). At any rate, it results in my reading books that I would otherwise not buy, but -- hey -- free, right? If I can try it free I will read all sorts of crap stuff. Hence this really, really 'guilty pleasure' rec that...erm... is unconventional and a little embarrassing, but I enjoyed it anyway, so what the hell.

"To Please a Lady" by Lori Brighton.

It's a Regency/Victorian (I don't know which, somewhere in there) with a male prostitute and a titled lady. It actually turned out far more sweet than I had expected.

The male prostitute, who is in his late twenties, had been 'procured' by a madam when he was 13 or 14 years old. Ostensibly it was a result of his having been a thieving street rat who would've been hung, and she 'rescued' him, and then 'gave' him a way to support his younger sister and widowed mother. Though he was too ashamed to admit it to them, so he disappeared out of their lives and had the madam send the money to support them all these years. (Actually, none of it was accidential. The madam was seeking revenge on his late father and procured the boy quite deliberately, while never sending any money to his family -- to tragic results. But that's for him to discover during the novel. Looked at objectively, he's a slave because he doesn't even earn money from prostituting himself. He only has pin money, never enough to run away. Everything was 'sent'(except not) 'to his relatives.' He owns nothing.)

Despite the fact that he's a street urchin and son of a servant, the madam educated him to gentlemany manners, conversation, and graces for her uppercrust clients (there is one brief mention that it most likely included both gender clients but it's not discussed further).

The heroine of the book is both married (a point that many amazon reviewers complain about) and a countess. I think that the writer might have been a bit inspired by either the Keira Knightly movie "The Duchess" or by the actual Duchess of Devonshire who inspired the movie, because there is overlap in the backstory. The heroine's husband is a monster who hides behind appearances. She was married off by her family for money and societal stature/title because she was lovely and fashionable (so really the only thing that differentiates her from the hero is how "society" views the transaction). The husband is an autocratic tyrant, an abuser, and a philanderer who not only openly consorts/prefers his mistress, but has said mistress practically living in the house with them.

At the opening of the novel the heroine has endured a decade of utter misery in her marriage (She's in her thirties and is 6 years older than the hero). She's long since realized that she has no legal recourse (she's tried, even having run away once). She is legally her husband's property in that time period, and society will overlook her husband's abuse and philandering, somehow labeling his behavior as the 'fault' of the wife. Even her family will ignore it and send her back when she begged to leave him, because hey money and he's an exalted peer!

At some point she's resigned herself that there's no escape and that her husband will mostly likely follow through on his threats and kill her one day... which strangely liberates her to no longer give a f--- and coalesces in her wanting a moment of defiance... which leads her to the hero...and it's surprisingly chaste for good portion of the book.

Date: 2014-11-15 02:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Hmmm...just read the descriptions of the series in Good Reads - each book is delightfully against the trope. The guy is the prostitute or whore, the woman respectable. And in two she's experienced, not a virgin.

Have you tried the other two? And can you read them out of order? The brothel Madam also sounds interesting.

I may jump over to that after I finish Unraveled.

(Although, I really should read the 100 or so I have on Kindle).

How's Kindle Unlimited? I might want to try that - since I seem to buy a lot Kindle books.

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