Annie and Evie have been friends since Annie first stood up for Evie against some bullies in elementary school. Now as adults, Evie is Annie's personal assistant. Annie is San Francisco's only superhero Aveda Jupiter. She's all about the glory. She dumps everything else on Evie who takes it because she feels like she owes Annie.
Annie/Aveda is truly abusive to Evie. Everyone sees it but her. When Evie is forced out of the shadows so needs to rely on her own powers to save the city and find a life for herself outside of Aveda Jupiter's orbit.
Good things about this book:
- Asian female superheroes - Annie is Chinese and Evie is half-Japanese
- The menace is fairly lighthearted and fun. It starts with demons taking the form of cupcakes that bite and ends with demonic minions who complain about everything the boss demon does. I could imagine this whole book as a technicolor comic strip.
- Evie learning to stand up for herself is wonderful.
Annoying things:
- Evie has been suppressing her emotions in order to keep her powers under control. When she starts to get in touch with her feelings, the first one that she notices is lust. She refers to her lack of lustful feelings as the Dead Inside-o-meter. The idea that she hasn't had sex in three years is considered proof of emotional problems. I'm not a fan of stories that consider either asexuality or celibacy as the weirdest thing that ever happened.
- Evie's teenage sister is the worst person ever. Well, maybe second worse next to Aveda. It is hard to tell but then they start hanging out together and amplify each other's behavior and it is everything horrible. They are selfish and childish but Evie is supposed to be seen as no fun for objecting to it all.
- I didn't like the romances in this book. They just seemed added because you have to have a sexual partner (see complaint 1). Suddenly, she has feelings for a person who annoys her all the time? The fact that someone annoys you is actually stated as proof that you probably deep down want to sleep with them. No, maybe they are just annoying and you have the good sense to stay away from them.
This review was originally posted on Based On A True Story