Also, adding Gentle Art of Fortune Hunting to my queue. I keep getting ready to start reading KJ Charles and then getting overwhelmed with all the choices and reading something else, but I am making the decision now that that one I will read soonish
That one is so good. There are several GAoFH Easter Eggs in The Gentlemen's Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel. Oh, and also, Wanted: A Gentlemen (which I cannot recommend enough).
Has anyone read Hench? I own it but haven't gotten to it, in the Evil Villain Genre.
I'm currently listening to The Keeper's Six and can say, I am loving these older, badass protagonist ladies.
GAoFH wasn't my favorite of hers, and since it is October I will recommend the Magpie Lord books as an appropriately spooky starting point.
Hm. I seem to already own Magpie Lord.
I liked Hench. Had a strong voice, and it's pretty good satire, if ultimately fairly lightweight (IMO). I will read more by them.
I recently read Ex-Wife by Ursula Parrott, which was written in 1929, and is quite a great look at NYC of the 1920s and the life of the swinging single woman of the time. Definitely recommended.
I am not listening to many of my podcasts because the news is all so terrible, and instead I'm re-listening to Tiffany Aching. Which is great. Stephen Briggs is such a fantastic narrator.
I wonder how many authors have books in this extremely niche genre. I know Scalzi has this one, and KJ Charles has Gentle Art of Fortune Hunting, but I'm sure they weren't the only ones to break through pandemic writer's block by just giving up and writing a completely different book that year!)
Cherie Priest has a novella coming out soon that fits into this niche.
I finally found a copy of
The Girl, the Gold Watch, and Everything
at Half-Price Books!
Just read Kailua Preservation Society, and enjoyed, thanks for the rec y’all!
I think K.J. Charles' Magpie Lord books were the ones that got me started on the author's books. Now they're pretty much auto-buy for me.
I now vaguely remember buying Magpie Lord (maybe after a similar discussion/recommendation) right after a previous spooky season (maybe last year, maybe longer ago, who knows?) and thinking I would save it for the next October but forgetting all about it. Anyway, I did read Gentle Art of Fortune Hunting and liked it very much but I am loving Magpie Lord!
I think K.J. Charles' Magpie Lord books were the ones that got me started on the author's books. Now they're pretty much auto-buy for me.
Same and same.
If people are interested in the intersection of spooky and LGBTQ+, I would also recommend the Widdershins series by Jordan L. Hawk. Sort of like if Lovecraft was the exact opposite in personality and opinions, but still wanted to write paranormal stories. Plus gay. The author has also started a modern day paranormal series about ghost hunters which I'm enjoying, but it's a work in progress.