![]() She exists and she’s grappling not with it, but with the shift in her new life after leaving the faith and joining a new deadship. This isn’t the kind of story where te queerness is like “LOOK I DID IT!” No, it’s just a facet of the character. There’s queerness in it and it’s so easy, simple, relaxed. I inhaled this story just like the first. ![]() I love these characters and the author is a phenom. ![]() Now they have a new live ship, that hasn’t been named and it was nice to see taht at the end, what it meant for them to do it. Not knowing if the person they loved and trusted was real or not. The characters are all dealing emotionally with something that’s hard to manage: questioning whether or not the person they knew really believed the things she espoused but also was expected to lead with. We follow the remaining nuns in their new living ship dealing with the fallout from what they witnessed and have learned about their former abbess.įor such a small book, it feels larger. ![]() Sisters of the Forsaken Stars picks up not long after the events of the first book. Even though it’s a novella it packed such a punch that I couldn’t wait for more. ![]() Sisters of the Vast Black was easily one of my favorite books when I read it. ![]()
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