![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Also, with passionate feelings about a great many characters I had no firm opinion on either way before, particularly Guinevere. I started out immensely exasperated with it and finished as an emotional wreck. Most surprising of my favourites from 2016, though, is Le Morte d’Arthur, which I read as research and thus didn’t review. It’s about hockey-playing, pie-baking college vlogger Eric Bittle, and it’s warm, fluffy and immensely lovable. Usually I am drawn to neither of those things, but wow is this story a delight. If you sign up to Tansy’s newsletter you can also get a free copy of the ebook, which I DID, and I love.Ĭheck, Please!, meanwhile, is a web comic about sport. Magical university, alternate universe geek culture, a quirky band, sneaky mythology references, what is not to love? You can listen to it here. ![]() Tansy Rayner Roberts’ Fake Geek Girl was originally published in Review of Australian Volume 14, Issue 4 and is also available as an ebook, but I heard it on the podcast Sheep Might Fly and just adored everything about it. I haven’t reviewed as much this year – partially because I was reading more non-fiction as research for Ladies of Legend, but partially because some of my favourite stories to come out of this year weren’t in traditional formats. I almost wrote ‘Top 10 Reads of 2017’, so that tells you how prepared I am to write this post. Love and Romanpunk – Tansy Rayner Roberts The Girls at the Kingfisher Club – Genevieve Valentine ![]()
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