This is a look inside The Bear who had Never Seen Christmas for @BookBabe it is a very sweet story of friendship and understand each other‘s differences 😊
This is a look inside The Bear who had Never Seen Christmas for @BookBabe it is a very sweet story of friendship and understand each other‘s differences 😊
This week I'm reading some book mail I received from Algonquin Books, LET'S GET BACK TO THE PARTY by Zak Salih. I'll be reviewing this on my blog mid-February, but this debut novel "examines queer culture, generational envy, and the search for belonging through the lens of two childhood friends who reconnect as adults." ?️?
#AmReading #CurrentlyReading #BookMail #LGBTTheParty #LGBT #QueerCulture #GayCulture #DebutNovel #Fiction
What this is about is something they call ‘False Positives.‘ From 2002-2008, the Colombian Military/Government incentivized the killing of guerrillas. This lead to thousands of the poor and the mentally ill being tricked into thinking they were being given jobs and being lead to their deaths, being shot, and being dressed up in guerilla fatigues for photo proof of death to earn money bonuses from the government.
I just want to say that something bothers me about this book that I can‘t put my finger on it just yet. This was a very complex book about two gay priests who we follow from a young age, to meeting each other and falling in love, to becoming priests and their simultaneous personal struggles with faith while serving their communities. Oh yeah, this all against the instability in Columbia with the guerillas, the military government and the 👇🏼
Well this made me stop and do some research. From Wiki: “Camilo Torres Restrepo was a Colombian socialist, Roman Catholic priest, a predecessor of liberation theology and a member of the National Liberation Army guerrilla organisation. During his life, he tried to reconcile revolutionary Marxism and Catholicism.”
The young man in this book credits San Martin de Porres Velázquez for healing his injury. I looked him up: “[He] was a Peruvian lay brother of the Dominican Order who was beatified in 1837 by Pope Gregory XVI and canonized in 1962 by Pope John XXIII. He is the patron saint of mixed-race people, barbers, innkeepers, public health workers, and all those seeking racial harmony.” I think I‘ll start chatting with him about that racial harmony bit.
Thanks to LibraryThing for a review copy. “Two Catholic priests fall in love amid deadly conflicts between the Colombian government, insurgent groups, and drug cartels.” Sure, I‘d like that one please. And it has arrived.
Here‘s my short stack for #24B4Monday. I hope to finish/read all three of these.
@TheReadingMermaid and @Andrew65
#riotgrams 22-LGBTQ+ Read. Intellectual, emotionally affecting. Can a relationship survive crushing grief? #Octoberphotochallenge