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My Big Fat Supernatural Honeymoon - Edited by P.N. Elrod. Pleasant (mostly) but forgettable. I picked this up because some of the authors I like are in it, but I got real tired of reading het story after het story w/conventional wedding & honeymoon scenarios over & over. Not to mention how many of the stories seemed to rely somewhat on the man protecting the woman. Yawn & barf. I don't know anything about Caitlin Kittredge's background, but her short story read like an American trying really hard to write British: let's toss in "bloody," "oi," "bloke," & "tosser" as often as we can & it'll sound British! Rachel Caine's story, a continuation of the one in the prequel anthology My Big Fat Supernatural Wedding, continued also to make me really, really sick of pirates. This anthology actually really showed off a lot of what I can't stand about romance-tinged paranormals (phrasing b/c I know a lot of romance readers only use "romance" to label a book if it follows conventions like HEA--happily ever after--& having there be only one man for one woman, & having the romance be the main point of the story, etc.).

Global Divas: Filipino Gay Men in the Diaspora - Martin F. Manalansan IV. First, a quick nitpick: despite the subtitle, the book focuses almost completely on Filipino gay men in the US, specifically New York City. Other than that, though, I enjoyed this book a lot. Manalansan looks at how Filipino gay men, mostly immigrants, construct their identity as gay men, as immigrants, as people of color. He, & they, distinguish between "gay," which they see mostly as a white American male construction (beefy macho guys), & "bakla," which is sometimes translated simply as "homosexual" but in reality usually refers to a very specific way of being a man attracted to men, particularly involving feminine attributes & cross-dressing. Also discussed are the class aspects related to bakla, & swardspeak--the playful, heavily-slang-ridden way of speaking that these men use. All around, very very interesting, & a sharp criticism of the way being "gay" in this country is often constructed in a way that ignores race, class, & immigrant distinctions.

Iron Kissed - Patricia Briggs. While I really enjoyed the first two books in this series, this one featured so many things I dislike about paranormal romance-tinged fantasy. Like the whole dominant-male wolf (etc.) thing: I think it's interesting to have characters (especially women) explore the tension between their human mores & customs & what their wolf (etc.) side is insisting happen. I think Carrie Vaughn does this well w/her Kitty books. I hate when writers seem to use biology (this time non-human biology) as an excuse to make women totally joyfully submissive to dominant men. Don't get me wrong, sometimes this situation can be hot. But when it becomes a standard for how women & men in this genre relate to each other? I fucking hate it. It also ties in w/compulsory heterosexuality & compulsory motherhood, blah blah. Anyway--I hate how Mercy seems to have gone down the path of just wanting a nice man to take care of her. And she loves when Adam gets angry, oooooh! And she HAS to choose between Adam & Samuel, b/c otherwise the pack will be torn apart (theoretically she could choose neither, but doesn't consider that; I hate that of course she could never consider having both) & it will be all her fault. Also, a few too many dippy comments about mixed-race exotic beauty. I could go on, but why? The sad thing is, I'll probably pick up the fourth book in hopes that things will get better, but it's definitely not going to be on my priority reading list.

Hum Bows, Not Hot Dogs!: Memoirs of a Savvy Asian American Activist - Bob Santos. Bob Santos has been fighting gentrification in Seattle's International District (where multiple Asian groups reside) for thirty-odd years. He grew up partly in the ID, living in an SRO with his dad, a former boxer gone blind from boxing-related injuries. Bob grew up to help form, & lead, various efforts to nurture the communities in the ID without allowing gentrification to drive them out. The book's title is a rallying cry from protests against a planned nearby stadium (hum bows, we are told, are a type of Chinese bun). The narrative is interesting, if at times a bit jumbled. Also, sometimes events seemed to be glossed over fairly quickly, which is understandable given the scope of the book as compared to its length (a little over 200 pages). Santos does give a good picture of the flavor of life in the ID, the problems of poverty & governmental neglect, & the changes that can be made when local activists have support from both the community & key government officials. Santos can be pretty humorous when he wants to be. I liked seeing other activist Filipinos whose auto/biographies I've read (Philip Vera Cruz, Peter Jamero) pop up too.

Personal Demon - Kelley Armstrong. Again w/the overbearing men in paranormals protecting weaker women. Arrrgh. I hate this trope, but at the same time, if the characters are appealing enough (& I guess, if the sexism isn't TOO egregious), I can read around it. That said, I did really enjoy this book; it hit my fluffy spot. Hope Adams, who has appeared before in Armstrong's books, is a half-demon who gets a rush out of chaos. She finds this problematic b/c she's not evil, & yet it is extremely arousing when, say, she witnesses someone dying or even just chaotic emotions. She tries to channel this desire into providing services for the interracial council ("good" supernaturals). In this book, the moral boundaries become a little uncomfortably blurry as she has to work for the Cortez Cabal (Cabals being kind of like sorcerer Mafia families) scoping out a supernatural youth gang. In comes overprotective werewolf sometime-boyfriend Karl Marsten to cover her back & hover protectively when she has a chaos-related freakout. It gets pretty annoying at times, but then again, I do like Karl & Hope as a troubled couple. Anyway: fluff, fun, didn't grate my nerves too badly, yay. Also I appreciated seeing a WOC (mixed-race!) protagonist w/o getting annoyed w/references to her exotic beauty or whatever.

The Sum of Our Parts: Mixed Heritage Asian Americans - Edited by Teresa Williams-Leon & Cynthia L. Nakashima. I liked that this anthology wasn't completely US-centric. Possibly the most interesting essay to me was about mixed-race Chinese in the UK during the 1930s. Other topics include the issue of mixed-race contestants in Japanese American beauty pageants; mixed-race queer Asians; multiracial stand-up comedy in Hawaii; and Dutch Eurasians. Lots of stuff I'd never really read about before.

Getting in Ttouch with Your Cat: A New & Gentle Way to Harmony, Behavior, & Well-Being - Linda Tellington-Jones. Some cat folks rave about Ttouch, a method of massage that, when used on animals, can be really beneficial for both health problems & behavioral issues, including making a cat be more affectionate, or at least, more willing to be handled by humans. I figured I'd check out this book from the library, because everything else I've seen about even learning about TTouch generally involves some sort of paid course. Anyway, as a book, this is a little oddly structured (it tells you in what situations you should use which TTouch in the first half; the second half tells you how to actually do the touches). If the anecdotes about its effectiveness in the book are true, then it's a v. impressive technique. Who knows, really? But if nothing else, I have learned a little bit about how to massage my kitties, in ways that will probably be pleasant to them even if they end up not being miracle cures, & that's not a bad thing.
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