so conflicted by this book. has so many great conversations wrt being unable to leave an abusive relationship with a narcissist and our relationship with god and our family, but at the end of the day it paints a lot of islam and muslims (mainly muslim men) in bad light. you can maintain your faith and be messy. you don't have to blame your imperfections and the adversity you face in life on your faith.
so promising in terms of dystopian concepts, but delivery fell short. i wanted more creepy stuff basically lol
also some women are simply not meant to be moms. perhaps this was the point, but listening to frida say what she would've done, how much she really cares about her daughter, etc. after what she did was f-ing annoying. my own strained relationship with my mom might not help, but it certainly took away from my overall enjoyment
picked this up because it was an available audiobook on scribd and was very pleasantly surprised to see that it's a polyamorous romance featuring two trans women and one trans man! hell yes!!
i think the only reason i was unable to give this five stars was the sort of lack of plot. sure, two of the main characters are writers and writing a novel is the goal of one of them, but outside of the smut and (really good) conversations surrounding identity, vulnerability, and being perceived, i felt myself wanting for more.
that being said, those conversations were handled quite well. i'm a cis-woman, so keep that in mind when i say this, but i really loved conversations about the body after intimacy, as well as what you can and can't control about your public perception as a transgender person. and of course i loved that the characters were able to be wholly themselves with each other, and the relationship was spicy and enjoyable