Reviews tagging 'Sexual assault'

A Notorious Vow by Joanna Shupe

4 reviews

wilybooklover's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful medium-paced

3.75


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maeverose's review against another edition

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2.5

I like the concept of this story much more than the execution. I liked the tension between Christina and Oliver, the deaf rep (more on that later) and the steamy scenes weren’t bad, but I didn’t care for… literally anything else.

I’m not deaf myself, and as far as I know neither is the author so I can’t say if the rep is good or not, however I didn’t notice anything harmful and felt like the author did her research. However, this book has both intentional ableism that you’re supposed to disagree with, and some probably unintended ableism towards autistic people. People often assume Oliver is ‘an imbecile’ (a slur for autistic or intellectually disabled people that would’ve been used at the time), and he’s offended by this in a way that frames being autistic as something to be ashamed of. Like, ‘he’s deaf not an ~imbecile~’. Christina actually says that exact quote replacing ‘imbecile’ with ‘deformed’, as well. I find it annoying that historical fiction often uses ableist language like that just because it was common at the time. It doesn’t need to be there, the story would be the same without it, just less offensive. Especially in a book that’s supposed to have positive disability rep, it irked me that there was still uncorrected ableist language.

Christina seemed very naive for her age, even if she did have a more isolated upbringing. I wished she stood up to her mother sooner, especially once she was safe no longer living with her. It almost made the book feel YA if it weren’t for the sex scenes.

As for Oliver, I liked him for the most part. I liked how his being deaf was explored, especially within that time period. There was at least one or two times where he got physically aggressive when mad (slamming his fist on a table), which irks me. But otherwise he was very sweet for most of the book, despite being a bit of a grump in the beginning.

This might just be personal preference but I didn’t like the conflict at the end
with Oliver going to the asylum
. It felt too high stakes and traumatic for a steamy historical romance (granted, this is my first historical romance so idk if that’s a typical level of drama or not). I just wanted a fun time and instead I got angst I wasn’t prepared for. Christina’s mother annoyed me a lot for the same reason. For both of those things that was obviously the goal, I just don’t like that much conflict in my romances I guess. I didn’t feel like it focused enough on the romance, instead focusing more on the drama.

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mephala's review

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emotional hopeful inspiring relaxing medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

An excellent finish to the series and my favorite book from it.

From the beginning I was intrigued by this story, mostly because of the hero - Oliver Hawkes. He’s a reclusive inventor, but what’s most unique, he’s deaf. Historical romances with disabled characters are not as rare as they once were, but still it’s always great to read one with respectful representation.

I really enjoyed how the romance between the main couple developed: it was sweet and comforting. It was slowly building up from them at first simply fining comfort in each other’s company, to becoming friends, and in the end loving each other. It was very well paced and fit the characters so well. Both Oliver and Christina have quit personalities, and I really related to them being reluctant to opening themselves up emotionally. Both of them had trauma in their lives, and perhaps that what at first made them connect with each other, but it also made their love all that sweeter.

I loved how Christina almost immediately wanted to learn sign language, how she wanted to understand Olivier and saw him as man, not just a deaf person. How she was respecting his boundaries, and he hers. Even before they even were friends, Oliver showed her more respect and care than her own parents. I think that was the thing that hit me the most in their story – the romance was comforting and lovely. And oh, all those sweet forehead and nose kisses! 



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bee94's review

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slow-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5


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