Red, White and Royal Blue
4/5. You guys. You guys! Someone wrote a queer romance basically to spec for me. Son of the first woman POTUS falls in instant dislike which turns into, yeah, you know where this is going, with the youngest Prince of England.
I started this on a NY to DC train yesterday and finished it this morning. I laughed. I sniffled. I sighed. It's an unapologetically wish-fulfilment* book about American politics and elections and blended first families, written by someone who has 110% read the fanfic classics in the modern British royal romance genre like Drastically Redefining Protocol and The Student Prince (the one I have deeply unpopular opinions about, but that's a whole other story). It's snappy and witty and extremely of the now, to a fault, maybe. And also about different experiences of queerness and power and family. And they write each other loveletters emails. Did I mention this was basically written for me?
*Maybe too wish-fulfimenty? I don't know. I have this odd sort of flinch reaction sometimes to things that are this committed to making me feel uncomplicatedly good about a fantasy political timeline that didn't happen. IDK if that's healthy or not. I'm a realist to a fault, and I have basically no patience left for the people on twitter who are still (fucking still!) going on about what President HRC would be doing. I mean, jesus, over here in the real world we've got shit to do, maybe you could try, like, engaging with that in a useful way instead of this pointless wanking? But I respect the balls-to-the-wall commitment of this book – she's going to make you feel good about a 2016 election that wasn't, and she's not sorry.
4/5. You guys. You guys! Someone wrote a queer romance basically to spec for me. Son of the first woman POTUS falls in instant dislike which turns into, yeah, you know where this is going, with the youngest Prince of England.
I started this on a NY to DC train yesterday and finished it this morning. I laughed. I sniffled. I sighed. It's an unapologetically wish-fulfilment* book about American politics and elections and blended first families, written by someone who has 110% read the fanfic classics in the modern British royal romance genre like Drastically Redefining Protocol and The Student Prince (the one I have deeply unpopular opinions about, but that's a whole other story). It's snappy and witty and extremely of the now, to a fault, maybe. And also about different experiences of queerness and power and family. And they write each other love
*Maybe too wish-fulfimenty? I don't know. I have this odd sort of flinch reaction sometimes to things that are this committed to making me feel uncomplicatedly good about a fantasy political timeline that didn't happen. IDK if that's healthy or not. I'm a realist to a fault, and I have basically no patience left for the people on twitter who are still (fucking still!) going on about what President HRC would be doing. I mean, jesus, over here in the real world we've got shit to do, maybe you could try, like, engaging with that in a useful way instead of this pointless wanking? But I respect the balls-to-the-wall commitment of this book – she's going to make you feel good about a 2016 election that wasn't, and she's not sorry.
no subject
Date: 2019-05-19 02:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-05-19 02:26 pm (UTC)I have unpopular opinions about TSP and the way it seemed to treat outing oneself as a moral requirement, but I literally haven't read it since it came out. And I'm guessing the DRP thing is how Arthur dropped his phone? or did something on purpose to out them? Because that really stuck in my teeth too. The truth is that this whole genre is so squarely all over my buttons that very few examples of it actually satisfy, if you know what I mean. My expectations are just too high or something. And tbf, more broadly, I have almost never read a celebrity/politician queer romance whose handling of outing and the politics thereof I liked, so.
I was about to say that probably means I should write one, but then I remembered that I did like 15 years ago, and come to think of it, I don't like that one's take on it much either.
no subject
Date: 2019-05-19 03:21 pm (UTC)I think I know what you mean by too wish-fulfilmenty. It's sort of an inverse to the Uncanny Valley, where CG characters get so close to real-looking but not *quite*. That not-quite is more disturbing to look at than a clumsy CG which is obviously unreal.
With wish fulfillment, there's an almost-there which is very satisfying, because it's just different enough from your personal ideal to seem genuine. A too-close match to the reader's ideal feels... suspicious, somehow, like tailored advertising designed to manipulate us.
I wonder if there's already a term for this.
no subject
Date: 2019-05-19 03:47 pm (UTC)Tailored advertising, yes. In this book, a woman is elected in 2016. She's not an HRC stand-in, but there's something picture-perfect about her mixed race, brilliant kids and her blended family and all of it. I do think there were enough stubmles and warts to make this enjoyable and believable, though. The blended family doesn't always get along, and the kids are equally adored and the objects of racism, etc.
no subject
Date: 2019-05-19 05:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-05-21 10:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-05-21 11:11 pm (UTC)Eh, I think calling that plagiarism is overstating the case, but yeah. The back third of this book is really doing it's own thing that the first 2/3 aren't. I kind of wonder about whatever she does next and what it will look like.