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Reviews tagging 'Body shaming'
La casa en el mar más azul. Edición especial: Edición especial con cantos tintados by TJ Klune, Carlos Abreu Fetter
351 reviews
I’m definitely learning that found family is one of my favorite tropes & this does that trope INCREDIBLY. Every day I was so excited to get back into this world to be with all the characters, it felt like home.
I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend this to everyone & anyone.
I do think it maybe was a little on the nose about some of the messaging it’s trying to convey, but I’m sure there are readers out there that need that & it didn’t detract from my personal enjoyment of the story.
Side note: Did anyone else get a Tim Burton vibe from this? Or was it just me?
Moderate: Body shaming, Death, Abandonment
Minor: Bullying, Child abuse
Moderate: Body shaming, Child abuse, Emotional abuse
I wanted this to hit me like Sangu Mandanna's The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches, which I realize was written two years after The House in the Cerulean Sea. Why was I swept away by that one enough to buy a copy for my comfort bookshelf, but not by this one? Especially when I love queer romances of all genders, I really thought that'd tip the balance for me. Maybe the spice level was higher in the other? Maybe because I don't do well with body horror, which felt fairly graphic in The House in the Cerulean Sea? (Probably folks who read a lot of horror would consider it tame, but it kept repeating a trigger for my C-PTSD, so I'm biased here.)
Spoiler about a problematic theme related to the children's make-believe adventures:
Still a good book overall. I might pick up the second book at the library someday, when all the furor dies down.
Graphic: Body horror, Body shaming, Fatphobia, Forced institutionalization
Moderate: Domestic abuse, Eating disorder, Death of parent, Colonisation
Minor: Cursing
Graphic: Body shaming, Bullying, Child abuse, Confinement, Cursing, Death, Drug use, Hate crime, Panic attacks/disorders, Forced institutionalization, Xenophobia, Grief, Death of parent, Gaslighting, Abandonment
Moderate: Sexual content
Minor: Death of parent, Fire/Fire injury
The adults of the world are so lovely but the children made my heart soar. They’re all so distinct- a lot of authors struggle to flesh out their underage characters- and individually special. I was delighted by every foul threat from Lucy and Talia just as much as I enjoyed their respective passions for music and gardening. Theodore challenged everything I have believed about family in the real world. Phee and Chauncey rounded out the crew, showing opposite desires entirely yet desiring their family most of all. And sweet Sal. I think Linus needed him the most. He needed a reminder of how the system can fail and how he as an individual can make an extraordinary difference to a child in need.
I cannot recommend this book to everyone enough, but I especially recommend it to anybody who has ever felt stuck in their own life, longing for more.
Graphic: Child abuse, Xenophobia
Moderate: Body shaming, Emotional abuse, Fatphobia, Physical abuse
Moderate: Body shaming, Confinement, Cursing, Forced institutionalization
Graphic: Body shaming, Child abuse, Confinement, Fatphobia, Physical abuse, Forced institutionalization, Abandonment
Moderate: Body shaming, Child abuse, Forced institutionalization
Minor: Homophobia, Religious bigotry
Minor: Body shaming, Eating disorder
Graphic: Body shaming, Bullying, Child abuse, Emotional abuse, Panic attacks/disorders, Forced institutionalization, Abandonment