Books with Love for Valentine’s Day

  1. Frenchman’s Creek by Daphne du Maurier—a bored, troublesome lady of the house falls in with a pirate whose ship is secretly docked in the river behind her country manor. Shenanigans ensue.
  2. Canadian Boyfriend by Jenny Holiday—an author who always includes serious content in her romance novels, this time addressing eating disorders perpetrated by parents who force their children to be success driven while risking the child’s health.
  3. The ADHD Effect on Marriage by Melissa Orlov—not romance, per se, but a book that will help you respect your spouse when the two of you may not think the same way at all due to bran chemistry. A truly loving perspective on relationships between people who have ADHD and those who don’t.
  4. When Madeline Was Young by Jane Hamilton—the story of a couple who marry, caring for the husband’s first wife who became disabled after a bicycle accident leads to a traumatic brain injury.
  5. The Garden of Small Beginnings by Abbi Waxman—the story of finding a hobby after the main character’s spouse dies and making romantic connections with time and common interests.
  6. The Words in My Hands by Asphyxia—a novel/collage about a near future in which food is scarce. Set in Australia, the main character is a deaf girl who meets a CODA (child of a deaf adult) who teaches her sign language and how to grow food.
  7. Seven Days in June by Tia Williams—two authors meet at a literary conference and fall in love while navigating disability and systemic racism.
  8. Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston—a story of how finding love is often a journey, one which may take a few marriages and a lot of bravery to be happy when no one wants you to be.
  9. IN&OZ by Steve Tomasula—a postmodern novel in which people don’t have conventional names, but are called whatever their occupation is. We get some cute romance stuff shown in bizarre, postmodern ways.
  10. The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith—a lesbian romance, foundational among lesbian fiction, in which the romantic leads are not killed for the sexuality.
  11. Dietland by Sarai Walker—a novel ultimately about patriarchy and anti-dieting, yet it’s heart is about loving yourself, about choosing you over others that has an undercurrent of Fight Club and A Clockwork Orange.

2 comments

  1. You’re too late! Valentine’s Day is already over in Australia. Did I have a date? No. Though Milly and I had a pleasant lunch at a vineyard yesterday.

    I’ve read a couple of your V Day books. The Asphyxia one was published as ‘Future Girl’ here. Am I reading something romantic? I’m afraid not. I have not one but two dystopian near futures on the go.

    Hope you have something romantic planned with your pirate mate.

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