lightreads (
lightreads) wrote2018-10-15 08:50 pm
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A Charm of Magpies by KJ Charles
The Magpie Lord, A Case of Possession, and Flight of Magpies
4/5. Historical M/M about a sort of magician and a younger son returned from decades in China to inherit the family title. Would you guys believe I read this for the articles? Seriously though, the magical plots here are truly engaging and, in some places, horrifying. Which is not to say I wasn't also into the romance. These two really struggled with themselves for emotional intimacy, and their conflicts always made satisfying sense. Though I do have to say that her portrayal of their height difference passed over from oh so you have a size kink and into something more like that feeling where someone tells you they crossed, like, a dachshund and a saint bernard and you're kind of like *headtilt* but....how?
4/5. Historical M/M about a sort of magician and a younger son returned from decades in China to inherit the family title. Would you guys believe I read this for the articles? Seriously though, the magical plots here are truly engaging and, in some places, horrifying. Which is not to say I wasn't also into the romance. These two really struggled with themselves for emotional intimacy, and their conflicts always made satisfying sense. Though I do have to say that her portrayal of their height difference passed over from oh so you have a size kink and into something more like that feeling where someone tells you they crossed, like, a dachshund and a saint bernard and you're kind of like *headtilt* but....how?
I only read the first book
The magic really engaged me, and I was into the romance right up until they abruptly had sex.
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(Which reminds me of the one which was so enraging, where the characters fall in love with a non-humanoid hemaphroditic alien but the human guy somehow manages to only have sex with the parts of the alien that would be female on a human, because reasons. Oh, Phil Foglio.)
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Yeah, and that's the sort of dynamic Charles seems to really like. Which I think explains why my favorite books of hers are those that interrogate that from the perspective of class, and why I don't much care about those books that come at it straight on.