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Like in Love with You by Emma R. Alban is a regency era romance between two rivals going after the same suitor. It has a strong opening, and for the first third of the book I was hooked. Two strong cunning women vying for a boring man's obstenively vying for a man's attention while eye fucking eachother the entire time. The added drama of their mothers having once been close friends now turned enemies heightens the narrative and the drama. Neither of the women really want the man obviously but they feel they must to please their families. It was interesting to read especially as this was my first regency era novel. Then they confess and have raunchy sex and maybe that's historically valid, maybe it's not, but it rather took me out of the experience. Especially it felt like the author gave up keeping the prose and characterizations in line with the era they were from. And while reading I kept wondering where it was all heading too, how two women without much agency would fair against such a patriarchal society and heteronormative expectations. All too easily it seems, no one is outwardly homophobic and both families after their dispute is resolved are persuaded to let them have their happy ever after. While I am no fan of Tragik endings, this felt like a fairly unrealistic fantasy of what was otherwise a grounded depiction of regency life. I appreciated that the suitor both women are competing for is given no good qualities, little dialogue and basically barely exists other than as a plot device. 6:10
Any recent sports romance? Olympics always gets me in the mood for one. The last I read was It's a Love/Skate Relationship by Carli J. Corson.
>>4526396The author's first book in that series, Don't Want You Like A Best Friend, does a pretty good job imo of depicting the difficulty two women in that situation would go through. They go through a fair amount of suffering on the way, and at the end their happy ending feels like the stars aligned for them specifically, and not like they were simply allowed to get away with it. I'll definitely read this one, interested to see how they compare.
>>4523669>>The Book of Blood and Roses by Annie SummerleeGot through it, not the worst, light on prose, somewhat simple characters, but all in all enough not to be a waste of time.Sex is indeed hot.
So I read three things that were entitled Playing for Keeps because why not. The first, Playing for Keeps by Alexandria Bellefleur is basically what if Taylor Swift and her football boyfriend had lesbian publicists? Also one has a praise kink and the other one is very into soft dom dynamics. There isn't much to say about this one beyond that the author clumsily exposition dumps the mcs traumatic past at you in the least clever way imaginable. The sex is mid. 5/10The second, Playing for Keeps by Pixie Chica is a short story that exists only for size difference smut. 5/10The third, and best, was Playing for Keeps by Jennifer Dugan. It is a referee x baseball player teenage romance set against the grief both of them are experiencing due to a family member dying from cancer. It is an interesting forray into toxic relationship dynamics and managed to make both the toxic girl and the non toxic girl sympathetic and interesting. I felt myself relating quite a bit to the characters experiences as I myself lost my dad at an early age. The prose keeps well with the drama, easily getting you into the headspace of both characters even as they experience very different things. The ending resolution is predictable but the way the story is written, it doesn't feel like an obvious plot beat but rather a inevitable tragedy when the tension finally snaps. I quite liked this one 8/10
Anyone else reading middle grade stuff?
>>4526343Don't use a clanker image for these threads, asshole.
In Charm's Way - Lana HarperBook 4 of the Witches of Thistle Grove series. Book #1 is f/f, and you don't need to read the others to know what's going on in this one.Not quite as good as the first one imo, but the purityfags will like this one better. The protagonist, Delilah is a stroppy little shit who, in a desperate attempt to free herself from magical brain fog, does a blood magic ritual that attracts assorted monsters to her, as well as a soft-butch monster hunter. It's a fun contemporary romance with a dash of fantasy and a smattering of decent action scenes that don't overstay their welcome. If you like (or at least don't mind) the American Halloween aesthetic, I'd say it's pretty good, and worth a read.
Waiting for a romance set in the Olympic village with the LC totally-not-based on Alysa Liu
>>4526788If OP fixes the thumb, it looks fine. Do not discriminate the clankers, please.
Is there something that's literally like those shitty dystopian YA novel with a protagonist and rival love interests but lesbian
Books with well written sex scenes (don't care if it's just a porn book or not, as long as it has good writing)? I find sex scenes boring if the aren't particularly well written. Goblin fires is my favorite for this. Icehole was pretty decent too.
>>4530427I'm not 100% sure if any of these are exactly what you're after (I didn't read a lot of dystopia when it was big), but maybe something here will fit the bill:Hearts Still Beating, Archer BrookeThe Last Bookstore on Earth, Lily Braun-ArnoldCharon Docks At Daylight, Z. R. ReedAnd these are fantasy dystopias:In The Vanisher's Palace, Aliette De BoudardRuinsong, Julia EmberCrier's War, Nina VarelaThe Never-Tilting World (contains het)I found Ruinsong to be pretty skippable, but the others were at least a good time. Hopefully something here will suit you.
>>4526396It was probably a mistake to just not end it with them having sex. Of course a regency-era lesbian romance wouldn't have a happy ending. Best-case scenario, the women involved, should they insist on staying together, would have to concoct some sort of lie for the sake of plausible deniability.Sometimes ending right at the point of the release of maximum dramatic tension is the best idea. Not every story needs to reach its epilogue. Glengarry Glen Ross is a good example of this.
>>4531384>muh realism Fuck off. Stories that end right when it actually gets good fucking SUCK
whats the name of that butterfly hong kong gang book someone linked last thread
>>4531384Could have gone with a Ladies of Llangollen ending, I guess.
>>4532020Was it When They Burned the Butterfly, by Wen-yi Lee?
Finnish anons, has anyone checked out Kultainen peura? Looks like some kind of historical kinda-fantasy yuri? Reading books in Finnish is a lot of time and effort for me, which is why I'm asking to know in advance if it's worth getting into.
>>4526343Link to the previous thread?
>>4530474>Goblin firesThat cover is really doing that book no favours
Any good rich girl/poor girl romance recommendations?
>>4533890Nobody in Particular, Sophie Gonzales (YA, contains an unwanted het kiss)Far From Home, Lorelie Brown (MC has het history)Lover Birds, Leon Egan (YA)Tryst Six Venom, Penelope Douglas (purityfags be warned, there's no het for the main couple but it's very obvious that the author's main shtick is m/f romance)Love at First Set, Jennifer Dugan (starts with love interest breaking off a het engagement)Not My Problem, Ciara Smyth (YA)Malice, Heather Walter (YA)The No Kiss Contract, Nan Campbell
>>4532430Haven't read it, but Otava generally doesn't publish slop, so I'd expect more artsy prose attempts and less romantasy.
>story is promising>main character's name is something stupid like diceWhy do they always do this?
>>4532430I have not personally read it, but it seems like it has gotten some glowing reviews. Don't know if the Karelian dialect is going to cause some difficulties for you if you are not a native speaker though.
>>4535109Find and replace or get used to it
>>4535092>>4535110Thanks! I'll try to read it. My Finnish level is "I passed the intermediate exam for foreigners" so I'll definitely struggle with dialects, so far I've only read the two earliest Simukka's novels which I assume are on the much easier end of the language difficulty spectrum.
Are there any big impending releases soon, like Gideon and Priory?
>>4538109Baru 4th final book soon this year.
>>4538140>Baru 4>Existinggood try
>>4538140[citation needed]
Started this, seems pretty good so far, autistic lesbians.Also read When the Museum Is Closed by Emi Yagi recently. It was okay, a bit weird for my taste. There was so much weird shit going on for such a short book and the yuri was only like 10% of it. It's about a woman who falls in love with a sentient venus statue. Also she has to permanently wear a raincoat that no one else can see and she can never take off for some reason. IDK it was weird but at least it's short so it might be worth checking out if you like weird stuff.
I find amusing how all of those books are written by men using female pen names or ghostwritten by males and the "author" in the cover is just a face and nothing more.
>>4538444About half way through this now and really enjoying it so far. Girl with Seasonal Affective Disorder crashing out at uni and meets a girl who loves Autumn and wants to get SAD girl to love autumn as well. So they just go around doing a bunch of cozy autumn stuff together. It's cute and cozy and wholesome and it has lots of platonic snuggling. Good shit.
For a genre written for, by and about lesbians they sure seem to talk about white men a lot. Book I'm reading now has mentioned 'white men' like 5 times in the last few pages.
>>4538479Same thing as how all BL and yaoi is with by women.
>>4539136Probably written by one of "those" that the jannies don't let us speak ill about here.
>>4538444I finished this. Was okay. Kind of fell apart towards the end. The cozy date stuff was really nice, but the mental health stuff was just badly written imo. One of the POV characters is meant to be autistic but you wouldn't know it unless she told you. She doesn't act autistic at all. I know people will say it's a spectrum and some people don't 'act autistic' but she's a POV character. We get a window into her mind and we get to see what she is thinking. At no point in this book did she think like an autistic person. Again makes me feel like being an 'autistic' woman is just autism on easy mode.
Tryst Six Venom is so good, oh my god.
>The flower that bloomed nowhereAnybody kept up with this? Is it still good? I stopped reading just after the first loop since that's where I caught up and then kind of lost interest with having to wait for new chapters.Also, any other good webnovel recs (aside from katalepsis and that author's other stuff)?
Any good isekai/portal fantasy wit yuri?
Tryst Six Venom is horrible. Dropped it after 2 chapters.
>>4543139So you didn't experience it at all and now you're saying it's bad. Especially considering that chapter 1 is about Clay being stuck in her own performative version of hell, being insufferable because she's naive and anxious deep down, and you can tell she's borderline crashing out unless you're blind. Okay.
>>4543311Yeah, the writing sucks. Not going to force my way through the rest when I'm not enjoying it. Plenty of other books to read.
>>4543345The writing isn't stellar but it's not terrible either, so I think you're missing out lol. But to each their own. I think Clay and Liv have insanely hot relationship dynamics, one of the best enemies to lovers in lesbian romance.
If anyone wants to read an age-gap story, try Beneath the Falling Leaves by Emma Collins. Not only is it an age-gap story, but the main character falls for her girlfriend’s mom at the time.
>>4543402I prefer age gap a la itou hachi
>Daughter of the Cursed KingdomThis book is easy to read and sometimes fun, which makes it better than most. I prefer the first book that is more limited to school life and has the better pov character. The sequel focuses on events too big for it to handle well while romance is put on the back burner with an unsatisfying resolution. The side characters are more likable and communication has improved but the key points are still skipped over.Why do characters in books so rarely just talk it out?
I only read yuri books with cartoon covers. If it has a 3D woman on the front I'm not interested.
>>4543402Yeah, tried it, but it was just so fucking generic and bland and soulless. I hate when books make me go "Is that all there is to lesbian fiction? Is this the best we can get?". It's such a depressing feeling.
>>4544536I don't only read yuri books with those kinda covers, but I do end up liking them the most.
>>4533890200 hours by Natasha West. I really liked this one.
Anyone read this? It's kind of interesting but the author mentions the race of every single character, even side characters who have like 1 line, and the only races are white and black. It's super weird. Just don't mention their race at all...
national socialist yuri
>>4544939>national socialist yuriWith a Jew girl and also having good ending for both.
>>4544941Israelis are basically national socialist already.
>>4544938The cover tells me everything I need to know. It screams tarot and fortune telling and whatnot. And only "those" types obsess over that stuff.
>>4544938I'm assuming that it's set in a fictional world, and the author doesn't know how describe races besides white or black without referring to real world locations (Asian, Hispanic, Indian, etc.) and doesn't want to call them "brown".
Havent read in a long time.I think the last book I read (and paid for) was Little Dip in the Garoul series.What's something actually good, has some action or drama, and not first person.
>>4545758That makes sense. I feel like at that point just don't mention race. It takes place in a single city in a fictional world so...
>open /lit/ book>first chapter>"he,him">close bookI'll stick to LN
>>4547134Most stories that aren't set in an all girls school have some form of male characters. Real life also works the same way.