lb_lee (
lb_lee) wrote in
pluralstories2023-02-21 03:58 pm
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Entry tags:
- 1+:abuse:not mentioned,
- 1+:fusion/integration,
- 1+:otherworld,
- 1+:people:the dead,
- 1+:relationships:enmity,
- 1+:relationships:romantic,
- 1+:type:possession,
- 1+:type:setting-specific,
- 1+:type:switching,
- 1+:visions,
- access:audio/dubbing,
- access:screenreadable,
- audience:adults,
- genre:horror,
- genre:romance,
- length:long,
- medium:writing,
- time:2020s
Harrow the Ninth, by Tamsyn Muir (romance/horror prose, 2020)
Submitted by
starfallhaven! Thanks!
"this was your shell, but it was all filled up with me. God, the double entendres were hard to resist."
Blurb: the sequel to Gideon the Ninth, Harrow the Ninth follows Harrowhark Nonageismus, who has failed to become a true Lyctor--a necromancer who has absorbed the soul of her cavalier. She is being both haunted by both visions and ghosts as she attempts to survive her time aboard the Mithraeum as one of God's chosen saints.
Why is it worth your time?: this book is extraordinarily good if you know what's going on (that is, body and mind sharing). The entire premise of Lyctorhood, one of the novel's defining world building aspects, is based on the idea of a secondary soul residing in a single body. There's even possession.
Plural Tags: mindsharing, switching, visions, setting-specific, abuse not mentioned, fusion/integration, otherworld, enmity and romantic relationships, the dead
Content Warnings: contain spoilers; see comments
Accessibility Notes: available in print, ebook, and audiobook.
Misc. Notes: This book is not going to make much sense if you haven't read Gideon the Ninth, and I can't recommend reading one without the other. Although I'm firmly of the opinion that knowing about the bodysharing aspect in advance will only make the reading experience more enjoyable, it is technically a spoiler to know about at least one of the bodysharing relationships in this book.
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
"this was your shell, but it was all filled up with me. God, the double entendres were hard to resist."
Blurb: the sequel to Gideon the Ninth, Harrow the Ninth follows Harrowhark Nonageismus, who has failed to become a true Lyctor--a necromancer who has absorbed the soul of her cavalier. She is being both haunted by both visions and ghosts as she attempts to survive her time aboard the Mithraeum as one of God's chosen saints.
Why is it worth your time?: this book is extraordinarily good if you know what's going on (that is, body and mind sharing). The entire premise of Lyctorhood, one of the novel's defining world building aspects, is based on the idea of a secondary soul residing in a single body. There's even possession.
Plural Tags: mindsharing, switching, visions, setting-specific, abuse not mentioned, fusion/integration, otherworld, enmity and romantic relationships, the dead
Content Warnings: contain spoilers; see comments
Accessibility Notes: available in print, ebook, and audiobook.
Misc. Notes: This book is not going to make much sense if you haven't read Gideon the Ninth, and I can't recommend reading one without the other. Although I'm firmly of the opinion that knowing about the bodysharing aspect in advance will only make the reading experience more enjoyable, it is technically a spoiler to know about at least one of the bodysharing relationships in this book.
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Sorry about the shitty mobile link.
-Nina (she/her)
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"I think bones are mediocre." HA!