Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
5.0
Another beautiful book by Kennedy Ryan. The second in the Skyland series, this one focuses on homemaker extraordinaire, Soledad. In the first book we definitely see the way that Edward, Soledad’s husband, neglects her and seems uninvolved in the lives of their three daughters.
This book starts with a closer look at their relationship, while we also meet Judah, divorced father of two ND boys. Judah has a mature and loving coparenting relationship with his ex-wife and it is a joy to see them remain friends and prioritize the well-being of their kids.
I won’t spoil anything here except to say I felt really seen and validated in Soledad’s journey to loving herself. I recognize that as a white woman I haven’t had to face the racism, structural barriers, and microagressions that Soledad has. Nor experienced the cruelty and duplicity she has. But her experience of feeling invisible and starved for touch…well, let’s just say those resonated.
One of the most powerful quotes I have read lately: “I’ve come to realize that a woman who wants more and realizes she deserves it is a dangerous thing.”
This book has also inspired me to return to a book that was really pivotal to my thinking twenty years ago - bell hooks’ All About Love. I can’t wait to see how it echoes differently across my life now.
And I think I may get a tattoo of one of the chapter epilogues: “I am out with lanterns looking for myself” - Emily Dickinson 💕
Like Before I Let Go, this is a slow burn. But once the spice hits, it is joyful. 🌶️🌶️
And it is a gorgeously diverse book - racial diversity, sexual diversity, neurodiversity.
Overall, a beautiful read. I am so glad that I picked up a copy at SteamyLitCon and got it signed by Kennedy Ryan. Who was so nice and blew me away when she told me that it is actually her on social media. She’s always out liking posts and commenting! 👑
Six out of five stars! I *CANNOT WAIT* for Hendrix’s book.
Wow this was 🔥🔥🔥. A former Dom who is now a priest and a former stripper who enters his confessional. I am sure you can imagine where this is going…
Obviously the taboo romance elements and spice are 👩🏻🍳💋. I give it 4 1/2 🌶️. Though I almost DNF’d because the self recrimination at the beginning was…a lot.
But that is not the most interesting thing about this book.
I was baptized Catholic though never practiced, and later baptized again in a non-denominational Christian church. I do not currently identify as Christian and though I recognize certain spiritual elements to my life, they are more tied to nature and community.
And we all know there are plenty of bad things about the Catholic Church, many of which figure into the plot of this novel. But I have to say that the way that the author writes about Catholicism, reconciliation, ritual, and the presence of capital G God, is really quite beautiful.
Luz and Evan 😍 Their chemistry and banter were so much fun! Fake marriage - one of my favorite tropes. And there is more than one my woman / my wife moment. 🫠
Luz is a firecracker and I want to hang out with her and the other Leonas. Evan is so swoony in the way he supports her but also lets her shine. He was such a goner from the moment they met ☺️
It is an open door romance though the spicy scenes are not super detailed. And there are many swoony moments. 🌶️🌶️🌶️
I love the world established by this book and can’t wait to read about the other Leonas finding love. Herrera wove in a love letter to Latine art, music, and fashion in the book.
And there are multiple kinds of diverse representation- racial and sexual and body type.
Overall this was a fast and fun read and I look forward to reading the rest of the series. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ / 🌶️🌶️🌶️
Loved this book. There are a lot of characters to start out and it takes a while to learn to tell them apart. Lots of twists I did not see coming. Sooooooo swoony. 6 out of 5 sparkling hearts 💖 Racial diversity is complicated because all characters are presumably Korean so not racially diverse per se but underrepresented in fantasy and the Korean American author is also underrepresented- so in the spirit of the question that challenges normative representation- yes, it is diverse. There is also an MM queer couple.
A fun and fast paranormal why choose read, featuring a Latina FMC. The pacing is good and the writing is fairly fluid. Not much in the way of world building. Too much telling instead of showing, so the spicy scenes fall a bit flat. Ends on a huge cliffhanger. I will start the next book immediately. 🌶️🌶️