Interracial and African American Paranormal discussion
What Series Do You Re-Read?
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Cf
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May 27, 2014 07:49PM

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I've re-read some of the books in the Psy/Changling series several times but not the entire series ... I want to read the Jane Yellowrock series - it's on my TBR list
With how obsessed with series (especially paranormal ones) that I am, I need more!


I know what you mean about the black Dagger books, I only re-read the 1st 5 they where the best! after that they really fell off for me too.
















I forgot all about the Medlov series, it is great too.I can't wait for the Scandalous Heroes, it will include a novella Vasilys Revenge By Latrivia with is a part of the Medlov FamilySeries and Rallenti By Siena Mynx which is the Battaglia series which is alo one of my favorites,along withe some other really good authors. I think I will revist these series in the near future!




I used to re-read Ward's BDB series until the last few turned up duds and it became obvious she really IS intentionally excluding us (as far as Im concerned).
And I will admit to having read the Twilight booms more than once...until Pattinson and Bitchella Stewart ruined the very thought of them for me.





AMEN!!!!! Absolutely. The Night Huntress World many, many, many times. Frost world of vamps is ultra sexy and very endearing.



They are not over the top erotic but definitely sensual. No BDSM or extreme sexuality but not what I would consider "clean" reads either. If you are sensitive to somewhat descriptive sex scenes I wouldn't recommend them. There is a thread in this group that is dedicated to cleaner reads that you may find some good recs on. Here'sthelink:https://www.goodreads.com/topic/group...
Happy book hunting Deva!

The author has irrevocably tainted her brand me with on that book, so now I simply can't bring myself to read any of her other stuff. In all honesty, I would be embarrassed to recommend it to other people. IMO, it is just that poorly written.
This is not at all meant to be a judgment on people who do like the series, though. I would never, ever do that.
On subject though: I am doing a re-read of the Kate Daniels series. That is one of my favorites, right up there with Nalini Singh. The last book was so outstanding, I read it twice in a row!






I'd say about 7/10 black female r..."
I'm going to have to go back and re-read Lover at Last because I don't remember reading that at all!

And then one of my GR friends broke down her issues with the series so eloquently -- seriously, she dropped some science in her post! -- pointing out all the problematic ways Ward was playing around and coyly using race and sexuality to appeal to under-represented groups without actually including them.
Apparently, since then the readers who had issues with her wishy-washyness when it came to m/m relationships had a stronger lobby than those who wanted more racial diversity cuz I guess there is now a real m/m relationship? (altho not the one people really wanted). Whatever, she is no longer really an author I will read so tend not to follow what is going on with her stuff to much anymore.


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The FountainPenDiva, Old school geek chick and lover of teddy bears
(last edited Jul 07, 2014 04:12PM)
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Sorry, but absolutely wrong.
I always facepalm when the old "historical accuracy" excuse gets tossed about. Europe, including Eastern Europe, was a LOT more diverse than many people realize. Bear in mind the invasions that area of the world went through. The Mongols which were an Asiatic race (and a bloodline which can still be seen on the faces of many). Then there was the Turks/Ottoman Empire (some of whom were dark-skinned since they incorporated the peoples they conquered). Plus there were various traders/mercenaries coming from the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. Oh and let me not forget about the Crusades in which some soldiers would have brought back slaves as well as treasure. All of this can be easily proven. Google is a writer's best friend and savior, lol. So no, I don't buy the lack of diversity in the BDB books based on "history". The bottom line is Ward failed in her research but she also knows that most of her fanbase won't care anyway. Ward thinks no one's paying attention to her blatant co-opting of urban culture, and I've heard she royally screwed up the M/M romance aspect in the last book.


Read Qhuinn 'n Blaylock's book (m/m) out of pure loyalty to the pairing and I must say....it sucked.

I get being the lone voice! *cough*DmitrysCloset*cough.
Ya. Went there again.

But yeah, I do think that after reading lily-white romances for over 20+ years, there came a point when I began to develop a more critical outlook at what I felt was a lack of inclusion or erasure of POC. And it just so happened that it came right around the time when I thought I was enjoying BDB but not really sure I was enjoying it... And my GR friend's post just seemed to crystallize and bring into focus all the things I had begun to feel but wasn't sure I could articulate why.

Thanks Tina, but it'll be a little while before I wade in these waters again! I'm more comfortable as an observe and take it all in kinda girl!
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The FountainPenDiva, Old school geek chick and lover of teddy bears
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No, Eastern Europe wasn't a melting pot, lol, but neither was it this lily-white world that so many think it was. And this argument isn't just against BDB, but has been brought up with Game of Thrones and other high/epic fantasy works set in alternate medieval Europe. Even video games have come under scrutiny by PoC gamers. The erasure makes no sense considering the mounds of evidence.
As far as liking something others don't, well whyever not? I know for a fact that books I adore aren't everyone's favourites. I'm cool with that. Variety is the spice of life after all and reading is such a personal thing.

TheFountainPenDiva wrote: "Monica **can't read fast enough** wrote: "Okay Deva & Tina you two win! Maybe I wasn't politically conscious enough when I read this series. If I only read books with diverse characters my choices ..."
I must say could not agree more as a reader of many different types of book by a lot of authors, in many differ genres the BDB books are really the 1st I've read by an author who blatantly uses Hip Hop culture and excludes African Americans in her books. I really tried to continue with the series after book 6 but it just got more ridiculous that there is not 1 black Shellen or Vampire or ever Doggen. its just kind of sad that in this day and age with so much diversity that an author would simply exclude an entire race.

Also, I agree about the BDB series lacking diversity. This actually bothered me for a while, especially with the cultural appropriation that's extremely rampant throughout the series. Then I read the Trez/Iam book and I still have mixed feelings. The first time a character of color had their own book they had to share the romantic plot with another's romantic plot (which, side note: I could've SWORN Xhex was described as brown skinned in one of the first books then became a typical white character later, then there's Sola who was distinctively Latina but she was a thief that didn't even end up with her potential hellren and HEA ... but is that because she wasn't the main character of that book or because people of color don't merit having a HEA or is it that she's thinking long-term and setting up the back plot for Sola's HEA many books in advance like she did the Quinn/Blay and John Matthew/Xhex stories or is it something else?)

In any case, I've never read any of the above-mentioned authors, so I can't comment on their work.
With the exception of Anne Rice, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro, and a handful of other writers, I don't like long, drawn-out series. Call me an oddball...lol!
Books mentioned in this topic
The Grunt (other topics)Highness 1 (other topics)
Dmitry’s Royal Flush: Rise of the Queen (other topics)
Anatoly Medlov: Complete Reign (other topics)
Dmitry's Closet (other topics)
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