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wtfever 's review for:
A Woman Lost
by T.B. Markinson
I found myself super annoyed at Lizzie. She's entirely too young for a mid-life crisis, which is what this felt like. "Oh, I have this wonderful woman in my life and I don't know if I love her because I feel trapped!" If she were one of my friends, I'd have been rolling my eyes so hard I'd see my brain. Not only is she not sure that she's in love with Sarah, her partner, but then she fancies herself attracted to her brother's fiancee. Yeah, that isn't going to end badly.
In the end, though, I understand Lizzie. She, like lots of us, has family issues that affect the choices she makes now. Thanks to the help of her friend Ethan she begins to figure out her "stuff" and starts to learn how to be an adult. More or less.
It was very good to read a romance novel with lesbians and lesbian sex that seemed realistic. It was weird at first, but good. To be honest, many "lesbian" books are not very well written. Markinson didn't write a "lesbian novel." She wrote a novel in which the protagonist is a lesbian, which is a whole different thing.
In the end, though, I understand Lizzie. She, like lots of us, has family issues that affect the choices she makes now. Thanks to the help of her friend Ethan she begins to figure out her "stuff" and starts to learn how to be an adult. More or less.
It was very good to read a romance novel with lesbians and lesbian sex that seemed realistic. It was weird at first, but good. To be honest, many "lesbian" books are not very well written. Markinson didn't write a "lesbian novel." She wrote a novel in which the protagonist is a lesbian, which is a whole different thing.