Gloria is a 40-something woman who used to be in the army, and now runs a halfway house for lesbian werewolves. (It’s self-supporting as a B&B; they just don’t book guests on full moon nights.)

The chef, Nadine, is a refugee from a controlling/abusive pack, and has been there for six years while they both refrained from acting on their attraction for reasons that I have already forgotten even though I am writing this review literally hours after finished this novelette. Something to do with not being sure the other was into them and/or not wanting to disrupt their friendship, I think. This is the book where they get together – again, I have already forgotten exactly what sparked that. Meanwhile, there is an unexpected family visit or two, and a pack of sexist male wolves is moving in on them. But it all works out okay.

I ought to have loved this – the premise is great, and I enjoy stories about day-to-day life in a specific community – but I only mildly liked it. The rival wolves didn’t ever feel like a real threat, and the family drama was not very dramatic. There’s past trauma, but too lightly sketched in to give the book a deliciously iddy/angsty tone or to give the present healing an emotional punch.

That leaves what should have been the real draw, which was the depiction of the community. But the characters felt thin, and other than the delightful bit about them all having to lock themselves in the basement with a kiddie pool and chew toys when they wolf out, there weren’t enough specific details to bring the setting to life or make the day-to-day aspects compelling.

However, it has universally rave reviews on Amazon and Goodreads, and I’m sure some of you would absolutely love it. It has a female alpha who’s decisive and compassionate, most of the characters are female or queer or both, and it contains many elements that people often say they want in fiction, such as characters who articulate their feelings and communicate clearly with each other rather than having stupid misunderstandings or unnecessary conflict. Humanity For Beginners is extremely wholesome and full of good values—too much so, for my taste. Without being preachy, it still has a “good for you” atmosphere, with extremely valid issues phrased like the human relations section of Ask MeFi. Personally, I wanted more bite.

larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)

From: [personal profile] larryhammer


extremely valid issues phrased like the human relations section of Ask MeFi

Ouch.

Sorry it didn't work out for you. Also, I hadn't realized it was so short.
mllelaurel: (Default)

From: [personal profile] mllelaurel


Trying to decide if this still sounds like my jam. I really perked up at the community building aspect, but it sounds like that's not getting enough focus. I also like it when characters talk to each other, but that doesn't mean I like my stories conflict free, I just prefer the conflict come from the outside, or from genuine clash of interests/beliefs on the protagonists' parts. I think I'll keep it on my 'vaguely interested' list.
mllelaurel: (Default)

From: [personal profile] mllelaurel


Sexism isn't really a favorite of mine, as conflict vectors go, but I like supporting likable queer romance, so I might pony up the cash regardless. (Library 100% does not have this one; not sure if it's published in physical form.)
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

From: [personal profile] sholio


Ooh, since I only got about a third of the way into the F/F book I started reading this week (distracted by all the Cherryh! ... er, plus it was kind of boring), this made me realize that this would be an excellent opportunity go review/rec my favorite lesbian werewolf story, which is also free online: The Cage. (Which took me forever to find, because while I've reread it several times, the last time was ages ago; I couldn't remember the title or author, and most of what I remembered about the plot was "a baby werewolf ate the protagonist's couch". I am surprised I actually managed to find it! I seem to go through the same process every time I want to reread it; at least now I'll have a link to it.)
mllelaurel: (Default)

From: [personal profile] mllelaurel


You had me at a baby werewolf eating someone's couch. :) Bookmarking The Cage for reading! Thanks for the rec!
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

From: [personal profile] sholio


Sure! :D I love that story and I'm happy to point more people to it.
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

From: [personal profile] sholio


Ha, well, "boring" is probably unfair. It's an accidental-baby-acquisition book called Baby Mommas. So it's not like I was expecting a thrill a minute, and it is actually well written and very sweet. I think one of the things that's making it drag for me, though, is that there's not nearly as much accidental-parenting shenaniganry as I was hoping for, or I should say, most of it is happening entirely off camera. For example, there's a reference to the woman with the accidental baby buying a car seat, which made me realize that up until that point she was just ... driving around with the baby laying on the seat next to her, I guess ...? Could we maybe have had that in an actual scene? (Or her stressing over not having a car seat and putting it in a cardboard box or something?) And the book skipped over her first couple of days with the baby entirely, there are just vague references to her being sleep-deprived and cranky. Plus, the baby is FIVE DAYS OLD, so it's baby parenting on super hard mode (that is a TINY baby!). I don't mind the baby being essentially a plot device to get the couple together, but they're skipping all the stuff that makes me actually want to read about the baby parts ...
Edited Date: 2018-05-18 08:30 pm (UTC)
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

From: [personal profile] sholio


Haha, that sounds like the anti-Rachel book.

LOL, this thought had already occurred to me. Not only is the entire premise "baby acquisition", but it completely skips all the awkward, worldbuildy parts of that trope in favor of nonstop pining/baby-cuddling. I do like the trope and I'm still not really feeling into it.

... that being said, I can completely see this being 100% someone's cup of tea if they just want the pining and cuddling. The romance is sweet.
cyphomandra: fluffy snowy mountains (painting) (snowcone)

From: [personal profile] cyphomandra


Ooh, I loved The Cage and had completely forgotten title, author, site or anything other than lesbians, court case and a cute werewolf puppy - thanks for the reminder!
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

From: [personal profile] sholio


Oh nice, glad to help! :) It's really a fantastic story.
nenya_kanadka: lightbulb moment (@ inspiration)

From: [personal profile] nenya_kanadka


I have this one bookmarked under "Aroooo!" I think!

And since most of what I remember is the werewolf puppy, I definitely need to give it a reread. :D

From: [personal profile] helen_keeble


Wow, that is a hella off-genre cover. I would never have guessed Werewolves from that....
nancylebov: (green leaves)

From: [personal profile] nancylebov


I'm distracted by the question of whether a B&B can survive and house non-paying guests (some of them probably pay, some of them don't) while not booking for three nights a month, especially considering that they'll lose more than 10% of guest nights-- anyone who wants a stay which includes any of the full moon nights also won't book.
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