Reviewed by Berls on
The characters are just super fantastic! Lucy is a scientist (astrologer) who worked with her father, doing most his calculations as he got older but was never credited. I loved the way she spoke - she knew how to be polite, but also strong and she knew how to use disguised verbal daggers. And then there's Catherine, the slightly older (~10 years) widow with money and freedom, but a painful history with M/F romance. She's never considered a F/F romance until Lucy shows up at her door, determined to translate a significant scientific work from French to English. Their romance is fantastic - there's an element of Lucy guiding Catherine, which is just perfectly done. And I loved the layers of jealousy, practicality, etc. that come into play.
Their career efforts are equally great. I loved watching them basically give the patriarchy a giant FU and blaze their own path. I loved the way the learned about themselves as artist and scientist - while also learning about others who have trodden their own, equally challenging paths. There were a couple unexpected and fabulous twists. And I'm very excited to see where these career efforts will lead in future books - as I *think* that's where the series will go.
I listened to The Lady's Guide to Celestial Mechanics, narrated by Morag Sims. Her narration was really great - especially when she had to introduce different class and area accents. This is the first time in a long while I've listened at less than 2x... I listened at 1.75. So not a huge difference and not because her performance was in any way lacking. I just needed to slow down a tiny bit for the accents, I think. I will continue to listen for sure.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 11 April, 2022: Finished reading
- 11 April, 2022: Reviewed