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Books > Fiction > Genre fiction > Fantasy
Valessa is in danger. Her town has been captured by Aventinian raiders, the women taken, and now she's on a ship destined for nowhere good. But when a terrifying, four-armed sea-ogre pirate boards the ships and demands compensation, Valessa's luck changes.
The sea-ogre demands a bride. It's the perfect opportunity for her to escape.
Valessa volunteers. She tells everyone she's very experienced with sea-ogres and knows just how to please them. She's very descriptive about it, too.
Thing is...Valessa's a liar.
She's never met a sea-ogre in her life. But it can't be that hard to keep one man-slash-monster happy, can it?
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The Parallax
(Hardcover)
Morgan G Farris; Illustrated by Morgan G Farris
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R801
R748
Discovery Miles 7 480
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Girl One
(Paperback)
Sara Flannery Murphy
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R417
R391
Discovery Miles 3 910
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"Megan Giddings's prose is brimming with wonder. The Women Could
Fly is a candid appraisal of grief, inheritance, and the merits of
unruliness." - Raven Leilani Reminiscent of the works of Margaret
Atwood, Deborah Harkness, and Octavia E. Butler, The Women Could
Fly is a feminist speculative novel that speaks to our times. A
piercing dystopian tale about the unbreakable bond between a young
woman and her absent mother, set in a world in which magic is real
and single women are closely monitored in case they are shown to be
witches . . . Josephine Thomas has heard every conceivable theory
about her mother's disappearance. That she was kidnapped. Murdered.
That she took on a new identity to start a new family. That she was
a witch. This is the most worrying charge, because in a world where
witches are real, peculiar behaviour raises suspicions and a woman
- especially a Black woman - can find herself on trial for
witchcraft. But fourteen years have passed since her mother's
disappearance, and now Jo is finally ready to let go of the past.
Yet her future is in doubt. The State mandates that all women marry
by the age of thirty - or enrol in a registry that allows them to
be monitored, effectively forfeiting their autonomy. At
twenty-eight, Jo is ambivalent about marriage. With her ability to
control her life on the line, she feels as if she has her never
understood her mother more. When she's offered the opportunity to
honour one last request from her mother's will, Jo leaves her
regular life to feel connected to her one last time. In this
powerful and timely novel, Megan Giddings explores the limits women
face - and the powers they have to transgress and transcend them.
'It can be tempting to read The Women Could Fly, which comes in the
shadow of the recent Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v.
Wade, and call the book timely. But the relationship at the heart
of this novel - between Jo and her mercurial mother - is much
closer to timeless.' - The New York Times
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