V’s Reviews > Love in Colour: Mythical Tales from Around the World, Retold > Status Update
V
is on page 37 of 304
I loved how well Babalola pens intensity into her character’s POVs. It’s palpable through the page. I will say story 2’s ending left me needing more; it’s felt like things were maybe kept vague to focus on the love story, but I still wanted to know the details.
— 13 hours, 31 min ago
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V
is on page 37 of 304
So I’m looking up the myths/inspirations AFTER reading the short story and the 2nd story masterfully incorporates elements of the original. I thought it was odd how she kept mentioning that specific number, thought tangentially about where I heard it before, then immediately dismissed it as coincidence 😄
— 13 hours, 10 min ago
V
is on page 34 of 304
I’m concerned abut why she stopped counting and is talking in the past tense 🫣🫣🫣
— 13 hours, 38 min ago
V
is on page 20 of 304
I love that Oșun is not perfect nor does she strive to be; she simply just is—discerning, grace filled, sharp-minded power itself.
As for the story, I love that the ending captures allowing yourself to sit in romantic reverence of another without diminishing who they are or the depth of how you feel; it seems instinctual to fawn, freeze, run away, or fight, but they just sit in it. I wish this was an entire book!
— Mar 11, 2026 07:53PM
As for the story, I love that the ending captures allowing yourself to sit in romantic reverence of another without diminishing who they are or the depth of how you feel; it seems instinctual to fawn, freeze, run away, or fight, but they just sit in it. I wish this was an entire book!
V
is starting
The intro really resonates with me and how I view finding and being with someone who sees me, loves me, respects me, and exists in the same plane that I do.
— Mar 11, 2026 06:30PM
V
is starting
Prediction: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️_
I want to let this serve as my intro to west African mythology, move to original tellings of these myths in a broad way, then narrow down to specific countries along side non-fiction history of those countries. I recognize the name Oșun, but I don’t know much else. Thisbe is a cut baby name; let me read her/his story first.
— Mar 11, 2026 06:26PM
I want to let this serve as my intro to west African mythology, move to original tellings of these myths in a broad way, then narrow down to specific countries along side non-fiction history of those countries. I recognize the name Oșun, but I don’t know much else. Thisbe is a cut baby name; let me read her/his story first.

