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#PRIDE AND PROTEST BY NIKKI PAYNE
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"Feminist romance novels are everywhere. With so many options and so little time, sometimes it’s nice to have a list like this as a starting point. This is going to be a very fun list of delicious feminist romance books that you must pick up and read, but before all that, we must discuss the feminism of it all.
For the sake of this article, I am following Mikki Kendall’s approach to feminism in Hood Feminism. The idea is that committing to intersectional feminism that includes trans women, women of color, and disabled women means understanding feminist issues are inherently variable and not always immediately recognizable as feminist issues. Kendall explains, “A one-size-fits-all approach to feminism is damaging because it alienates the very people it is supposed to serve, without ever managing to support them” (3). So, while feminism is about the promotion of gender equality, that is just an element of feminism. The role of active feminists is to be aware that more than just a person’s gender impacts their access to rights and services. While I would also recommend reading bell hooks and other excellent feminist writers, I appreciate Kendall’s explanation here.
Feminist literary critics have also looked at how romance can talk about the complexities of feminist issues within their story framework. Avidly Reads Guilty Pleasures by Arielle Zibrak understands the ways romance novels are a source of feminine media culture some associate with shame and censure, reflecting that the Western world often diminishes feminine interests and pursuits. All that is to say, romances have been praised for centering feminist interests and issues like love, job security, equal partnership, and reproductive rights."
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bookhoarding · 4 months
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Hey Valentine, have you ordered your copy of Sex, Lies and Sensibility yet?
Pre-order it right now on Bookshop > buff.ly/3HS2dc4
[ID: Cover for SLAS beside text. "Roses are red, Violets are blue. Sex, Lies and Sensibility is just right for you."]
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whitneydaniell · 1 year
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by: Nikki Payne Published: Nov 15, 2022 Genre: Romance, Contemporary, Fiction 401 Pages, Paperback
★★★
GoodReads Synopsis:
Liza B.--the only DJ who gives a jam--wants to take her neighborhood back from the soulless property developer dropping unaffordable condos on every street corner in DC. But her planned protest at a corporate event takes a turn after she mistakes the smoldering-hot CEO for the waitstaff. When they go toe-to-toe, the sparks fly--but her impossible-to-ignore family thwarts her every move. Liza wants Dorsey Fitzgerald out of her hood, but she'll settle for getting him out of her head.
At first, Dorsey writes off Liza Bennett as more interested in performing outrage than acting on it. As the adopted Filipino son of a wealthy white family, he's always felt a bit out of place and knows a fraud when he sees one. But when Liza's protest results in a viral meme, their lives are turned upside down, and Dorsey comes to realize this irresistible revolutionary is the most real woman he's ever met.
My Review:
This was a s-l-o-w burn for me. I found that the more I read, the more I was interested in the story but for 75% of the book, I was quite over Liza and Dorsey.
This love story, in the foreground of Washington DC, didn't curl all the way over for me. Liza and her sisters are known for their beauty throughout the city: The Bennett Sisters with her oldest sister being a former beauty queen. Through their own trials and tribulations, all three Bennett sisters live in a two-bedroom apartment with their mother and grandmother.
Liza is fighting the good fight against gentrification in their neighborhood when she meets, uber-billionaire DOrsey Fitzgerald. This is truly a 'Pretty Woman' story -- that reference is used a few times in the book.
Here's where the story lost me:
Beverly Bennett is an awful mother who has cast her own insecurities and fears onto her daughters and, is jealous of them. She wants nothing more than for them to marry rich. The whole scene at the awards banquet was cringe-worthy. Ms. Payne, you could have given this family so many other struggles but this was too much for me.
Liza is a beautiful, educated young woman who is pining after a job with WCO, a foundation that Dorsey's mother created. While that is noble and great, however, in DC with her education, there would be plenty of non-profits that she could have worked for to get her experience. It seemed to me like she just wanted WCO or nothing else and that was frustrating.
How did Chicho get back to DC from Philadelphia after the gala? She rode up there with them as Maurice's plus one but, when it's time for them to leave, there is no mention of Chicho in the van.
The whole story with LeDeya and WIC (also, I hate this nickname), hated it. There could have been a better way to have Dorsey swoop in and save the day but, this?! Sidenote, so Janae is Danny Ocean now? She can hack accounts and create false wire transfers?! That was just too much.
My Final Thoughts: It was a cute love story. From the beginning, as a reader, I saw where it was going. Did it take too long to get there? Yes. Did I hate the book? No. Would I read a book solely about Janae and David's romance with backstories about both of them? Maybe.
One-Word Summary: T-Shirt
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misscrawfords · 11 months
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I'm reading Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne, a modern retelling of Pride and Prejudice and I'm struggling.
I actually find what Payne has done with the characters and setting really interesting and there are some touches I really like, especially turning Mary into Maurice - an "activist" who changes his activism regularly and lectures others on what they should be doing. (Any interpretation of Mary that isn't "misunderstood, shy, nerd girl who isn't-like-other-girls and is actually just like me, a misunderstood, shy, over-looked nerd girl" gets a positive vote from me.)
However, I really very much dislike her interpretation of Darcy (Dorsey) and Elizabeth (Liza)'s relationship and that is... kinda crucial!
It's waaaaaay over sexualised. Like, I get this is a romance book, but, like, I'm reading along enjoying the story and plot and then suddenly Dorsey is thinking about burying himself in Liza's breasts and I'm like "wooaah!" It's like it's impossible for the author to show them having feelings for each other without it being explicit and I find that out of place both with the source material and with the rest of the narrative.
Secondly, it is sexual... immediately. It commits the cardinal sin of saying "Darcy and Lizzy were hot for each other from the start and all the tension is ~ s e x u a l tension". The 2005 abomination does this too with the near kiss in the rain. And pretty much every single P&P inspired enemies-to-lovers narrative out there does it too. The problem is... this is a really, really inaccurate interpretation of the original book. Darcy is, admittedly, attracted to Elizabeth very quickly. Something that he manages to show not at all to anybody. Only Caroline Bingley, who is intensely interested in Darcy's romantic feelings, spots it. Later on, arch observer Charlotte and good friend Col Fitz also suspect something but by this point in Rosings Darcy has given into his feelings and is trying, albeit terribly, to court Elizabeth. Not that she notices. Darcy is completely able to conceal his sexual attraction to Elizabeth from everyone who isn't thinking about Darcy sexually. He is not quite so able to conceal his romantic interest later on. But crucially, at no point does Elizabeth notice a thing. She has LITERALLY NO IDEA. This is because Elizabeth has no concept of Darcy as a romantic prospect for her at all. She laughs at thinking what a good match he'd be for Anne de Bourgh, a probably sexless in appearance invalid. She doesn't hate him in a ~sexy~ way, she just really does not like him and does not consider him as a romantic option.
If Elizabeth is aware that Darcy has the hots for her, this changes the dynamic completely. If she is actually attracted to him in the first part of the story, that changes the dynamic completely. And both of these changes alter and potentially cheapen Elizabeth's character. If she is aware on some level that Darcy likes her and is interested in her, then she ends up looking like an idiot when the first proposal comes around. Or she ends up looking coy and like she is actually flirting with him. Yes, there is banter but Elizabeth is not consciously flirting or trying to attract him! Elizabeth spends the whole first part of the novel with a crush on Wickham. Austen is perfectly capable to showing to the audience without needing modern explicit language that a character has the hots for another character. Elizabeth fancies Wickham, not Darcy! As the meme goes, Darcy and Elizabeth are experiencing two very different kinds of tension! That's part of the comedy. And if Elizabeth is aware that she is attracted to Darcy, it just becomes a different story, and a less interesting one. Elizabeth becomes yet another romance novel heroine who likes the "bad boy" and tries to persuade herself not to, until the tension is sooooo strong and she ~snaps.
But one of the major points is that Elizabeth doesn't like bad boys! She falls for (well, crushes on) Wickham because she thinks he's good. She dislikes Darcy because she thinks he's bad. She only starts to consider Darcy positively when she understands and sees for herself the truth of his character. That is what she finds attractive, not him being a buttoned up jerk! "One has all the goodness, the other all the appearance of it." That is central to P&P's story and its message.
Unfortunately, in the aims of writing a "romance" novel, Pride and Protest gives us heaving busoms and erections and almost-kisses and therefore completely destroys my interest in Dorsey and Liza's relationship at the same time as well as finding it just a bit tasteless because it feels like there are two stories going on: an interesting exploration of how the context and characters of P&P would work in a highly politised and racially diverse modern USA - and a very generic romance novel story which doesn't do either Darcy and Elizabeth justice. A shame.
It does make me wonder about how to update Austen's novels in terms of sex. Because obviously one of the major changes between the 1810s and now is that having extra-marital sex is totally normal and people date and break up without social repercussions. So unless you are setting the update in a community where that is not the case, you've got to deal with sex being freely on offer. I guess there are different ways around it but I think if how you deal with sex means that the fundamental beats of the narrative and character development are changed, then something's gone wrong somehow. And I feel that Elizabeth's total obliviousness to Darcy having any positive feelings towards her at all until the moment he proposes to her is a crucial part of the plot and a source of unending humour.
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mermaidsirennikita · 2 months
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Any particularly good recs for contemporary enemies to lovers? Thanks!
I think most of the contemporaries I'd recommend are technically more on the rivals to lovers span? But that's more a genre thing, they just aren't in intense enough circumstances to be what I would call ~PISTOLS AT DAWN~ enemies.
Heated Rivalry by Rachel Reid. Obviously, this is about a huge rivalry--the two biggest hockey stars, known for their legendary rivalry... while they've been secretly fucking since their rookie year. But it's not love! Definitely not love! TOTALLY not love!!! One of my favorite books of all time.
Lush Money by Angelina M. Lopez... I just recommended this and I recommend it a lot, but it's just that good and these two do REALLY loathe each other, to an "angry sex" degree.
The Worst Guy by Kate Canterbary. The hero and heroine are doctors who begin casually hatefucking while working through workplace conflict resolution lmao. Like, they shit talk each other while he's balls deep.
Do Your Worst by Rosie Danan has a slight magical twist but I'd really call it contemporary. An occult expert and an archeologist end up at odds when they're working on the same ~haunted~ site. He thinks she's a total manipulator.
You, Again by Kate Goldbeck definitely begins with this, as the leads are literally fucking the same woman (plus they're diametrically opposed, as he's a straitlaced chef who just wants to settle down and she's a freewheeling standup comedian who's commitmentphobic). They do gradually become friends, but it takes years.
Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne is a Pride and Prejudice retelling wherein the hero is a billionaire and the heroine is an activist protesting against... basically everything he stands for, lol. Or what she THINKS he's stands for.
I would also say that you should for sure mark you calendar for Not Another Love Song by Julie Soto, because THAT... is a lot lol. And they're very literally competing against each other.
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fated-mates · 3 months
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We’re joined this week by the fabulous Nikki Payne, author of Pride & Protest and this month’s new release Sex, Lies & Sensibility to talk about home renovation romance and why we all love it so much! Is it because of competence? Yes. Because we like it when characters have to walk through fire together? Definitely. Because of the metaphor for our lives and futures? Absolutely. We talk about all these things, and how Old School historical really did the business on this trope. And — a bonus! Sarah finally gets to talk with someone about Jane Austen!
Nikki will be joining us in Brooklyn for Fated Mates Live on March 23rd! You should come!
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redheadgleek · 3 days
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May book round up
I swore I read more than this, but I started a half dozen books and didn't finish them, so that's probably contributed to the feeling. 
Fangs by Sarah Andersen - a cute little collection of comics about a vampire and her werewolf boyfriend. 
Tom Lake by Ann Pratchett (audiobook). The audiobook was read by Meryl Streep, so it sounded like a one woman play. And made me want to go pick cherries. 
Lore of the Wilds by Analeigh Sbrana. It was such a debut book. She needed tighter editing, somebody to help her with all of the dangling plots. There's supposed to be a sequel (definitely ended on a cliffhanger), but I'm not sure I'll be picking it up. 
Here We Go Again by Alison Cochrun. So much better than Kiss Her Once for Me. I love me a good road-trip self-discovery story and this was just the escape that I needed.
Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell. Really enjoyed this look at what William Shakespeare's domestic life might have looked like. I loved that while he was a character in the story, he was never referred to by name. 
Counting the Cost by Jill Duggar. I'll admit to watching the train wreck that was the Duggar reality series occasionally. This was a fast read and it was great seeing her stand up for herself more. But so many of her emotions remained on the surface level, and she never quite got to the level of deconstruction that I was hoping for.
Rogue Protocol by Martha Wells (audiobook). MIKI was the bestest and Murderbot is starting to recognize its feelings. Very much enjoying this series. 
Night by Elie Wiesel. Always hard to rate autobiographies, particularly ones dealing with atrocities, but his writing was haunting. 
What I'm currently reading or my collection of neglected books:
I've made it about halfway through The Book That Wouldn't Burn by Mark Lawrence and I am still struggling to engage with it. It's due back at the library, but my hold for the ebook version should be available soon, so I guess I'll decide whether I'll finish it. 
I read a couple of chapters of The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese - it just seemed like heavier of a book than I wanted to read right now. 
I started reading a couple of modern Jane Austen retellings by Nikki Payne (Pride and Protest and Sex, Lies, and Sensibility) and both of them start out with so much heavy-handed exposition, that I put them back down, but I'm intrigued enough about the plot that I may go back.
I also tried reading Teach the Torches to Burn by Caleb Roehrig, a queer Romeo and Juliet retelling, but I also couldn't get into it. 
I started The Will of the Many by James Islington tonight because it's also due back at the library and I've had friends rave recently about it and I think I might try making more of a dent on it tomorrow.
If you've read any of these and have suggestions about which ones I should continue, let me know!
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triviareads · 9 months
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Y'all if you're an Austen fan and haven't read Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne you should get on that asap if only because it has the greatest first meeting between Dorsey and Liza, complete with cringe racial misidentification ("Solidaridad, hermano" lmaooooo) that leads to Liza assuming Dorsey is The Help, Dorsey rolling with it in order to fuck over her protesting his luxury apartment complex, and a don't-look-don't-look-ah-dammit *glances at her tits* moment.
Genuinely a masterclass in how it's possible to wanna bang someone's brains out while making a lot of (wrong) assumptions about them based on first impressions.
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bookclub4m · 4 months
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Episode 189 - Romantic Comedies & Humorous Romance
This episode we’re discussing the fiction genre of Romantic Comedies! We talk about the difference between “fun” and “funny,” crossover romance genres, cataloguing romance fiction, and more!
You can download the podcast directly, find it on Libsyn, or get it through Apple Podcasts or your favourite podcast delivery system.
In this episode
Anna Ferri | Meghan Whyte | Matthew Murray | Jam Edwards
Things We Read (or tried to…)
The House Witch by Delemhach
A Witch's Guide to Fake Dating a Demon by Sarah Hawley
One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston 
Evvie Drake Starts Over by Linda Holmes
Delilah Green Doesn't Care by Ashley Herring Blake
Take Me Home by Lorelie Brown 
I Kissed a Girl by Jennet Alexander 
The Bromance Book Club by Lyssa Kay Adams
Other Media We Mentioned
When Harry Met Sally… (Wikipedia)
The Bear (Wikipedia)
Nominated for Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy
The Martian (Wikipedia)
Golden Globes change comedy rules after controversial win for The Martian
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
Beetlejuice (Wikipedia)
The Wallflower Wager by Tessa Dare
A Week to be Wicked by Tessa Dare
You Deserve Each Other by Sarah Hogle
Red, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston
Judgment (video game)
Bridgertons Series by Julia Quinn
Crazy Stupid Bromance by Lyssa Kay Adams
A Very Merry Bromance by Lyssa Kay Adams
The Duke Who Didn’t by Courtney Milan
Cats (2019 film) (Wikipedia)
Links, Articles, and Things
Episode 119: Regency Romance
What does a happily ever after look like? (romance novel covers)
Sensible Chuckle (Know Your Meme)
There Is Only One Bed (TV Tropes)
Pop Culture Happy Hour
Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me!
Does the Dog Die?
20 Humorous Romance by BIPOC Authors
Every month Book Club for Masochists: A Readers’ Advisory Podcasts chooses a genre at random and we read and discuss books from that genre. We also put together book lists for each episode/genre that feature works by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) authors. All of the lists can be found here.
Courting Samira by Amal Awad
The Wildest Ride by Marcella Bell
A Proposal They Can't Refuse by Natalie Caña
Yinka, Where Is Your Huzband? by Lizzie Damilola Blackburn
Rent a Boyfriend by Gloria Chao
How to Find a Princess by Alyssa Cole
You Had Me at Hola by Alexis Daria
Game On by Seressia Glass
Manhattan Dreaming by Anita Heiss
Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert
A Dash of Salt and Pepper by Kosoko Jackson
Much Ado about Nada by Uzma Jalaluddin
Serena Singh Flips the Script by Sonya Lalli
The Stand-Up Groomsman by Jackie Lau
Booked on a Feeling by Jayci Lee 
The Secret to a Southern Wedding by Synithia Williams
Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne
Tastes Like Shakkar by Nisha Sharma
The Worst Best Man by Mia Sosa
The Donut Trap by Julie Tieu 
Give us feedback!
Fill out the form to ask for a recommendation or suggest a genre or title for us to read!
Check out our Tumblr, follow us on Instagram, join our Facebook Group, or send us an email!
Join us again on Tuesday, February 20th we’ll be talking about our reading resolutions for 2024! 
Then on Tuesday, March 5th we’ll be discussing the genre of Dark Fantasy!
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dustjacketmusings · 4 months
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Hmmm pride and protest is three words, has a red (and pink) cover, and Nikki Payne is black. That's three prompts in one go
Hmmmmmmmmm
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rachelkolar · 1 year
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2022 wasn't as killer a year for books as 2021, but I don't know how it could be; 2021 was my introduction to Clive Barker, Livia Llewellyn, and especially the Kushiel books, which made me wail "Where have you been?!" like Molly Grue. I still had no trouble putting together my top ten first-time reads and a couple of honorable mentions. There are so many good books, y’all!
Alphabetical by author:
Watership Down by Richard Adams, read by Peter Capaldi. This was technically a reread, but it didn't click for me at all when I read it in eighth grade. Boy howdy, it clicked this time. It's a classic for a reason, and Capaldi nails the narration.
Piranesi by Susanna Clarke. This is the only time I ever finished a book, flipped back to the beginning, and immediately read it again. I was crying at the end without quite knowing why. Just gorgeous and moving and wonderful.
Die by Kieron Gillen. Basically a hard R graphic novel of the 80s Dungeons & Dragons cartoon with some fascinating meditation on TTRPGS in general. It disappears up its own butt a bit, but it's still terrific.
Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro. This is everything I wanted AI: Artificial Intelligence to be.
Curse of Dracula by Kathryn Ann Kingsley. This is sort of the catch-all for my discovering Kingsley this year; I read *eight* of her books. She's my exact horror romance sweet spot for when I want a bit of creepiness and a lot of swoon. Sometimes you just want Phantom of the Opera where Eric gets the girl, okay? (Although that's more Impossible Julian Strande than Dracula, but how am I supposed to say no to well-done vampire smut?)
Boys Life by Robert McCammon. I did a trivia special about the Stoker Awards in October, so I read a *lot* of Stoker winners this year, and this was the best. Bradbury-like dark fantasy dripping with nostalgia. I cried twice. (CW: a dog and a child die)
The Call by Peadar O'Guilin. I freaking loved this book. Body horror plus the Wild Hunt? Yes please! Also, while this is coming from someone whose only physical disability is terrible eyesight, Nessa is possibly the best disabled character I've ever read. She has polio, and the book is crystal clear on two points: this *doesn't* mean the Wild Hunt is going to kill her immediately, but it's *horrible* for her chances. We never get any "if she works hard, then by cracky, she may as well not be disabled at all!", but it's always clear that she has a chance and anyone who says otherwise can kiss off.
Kings Rising by C.S. Pacat. When I was on a heavy Thrawn kick last winter, I asked r/romancebooks to recommend a book with a Thrawn-like love interest, and some saint mentioned this. Laurent isn't quite Thrawn–imagine Thrawn's angry teenage brother–but whew, he's close enough. The whole trilogy is good, but the power dynamics are so delicious in the third one that it wins the day. (CW: the first book has noncon, and there's repeated mention of childhood sexual abuse, although none on screen. The villain is into that sort of thing.)
Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse. Black Sun was one of my favorite reads of 2020, and this is a worthy sequel. It even made me like Naranpa!
The Hidden Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. Schwab. Just…gorgeous. I loved this one.
Honorable mentions: Starless by Jacqueline Carey (speaking of great disabled characters), Prairie Fires by Caroline Fraser (the true story of Little House on the Prairie), NPCs by Drew Hayes (just a blast), Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne (a fun, spicy modernization that had me laughing out loud), and Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare (a gory romp that dares to ask: what if there were a clown in a cornfield?).
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rhonda-with-a-book · 2 years
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Going live on TikTok to talk with Pride and Protest author Nikki Payne!
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ezichiny · 9 months
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Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne
TITLE: Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne My rating: 4 of 5 stars Genre: Modern retelling, contemporary romance, Jane Austen retelling, diverse romance Format: Paperback (401 pages) Published: November 15, 2022 by Berkeley Blurb: Liza B–The Only DJ That Gives a Jam—wants to take her neighborhood back from the soulless property developer dropping unaffordable condos on every street corner in DC. But…
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aspens-library · 10 months
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Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne
⭐⭐⭐
This is a modern day retelling of Pride and Prejudice. I am not a fan of Pride and Prejudice to begin with, so I disliked the elements where these two books were very close in story. I found the commentary on gentrification to be intriguing and I liked Liza a lot.
I hate Dorsey. He is a stuck up millionaire and while I was hoping he would get a thorough redemption, it felt very rushed in this book. For around 85% of the book, he is a total ass, yet he makes a big change to be a nice guy. I felt like the change itself should’ve been a slower progression and not a sudden 180. 
I enjoyed the writing itself and look forward to reading more by Payne.
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devianbooks · 1 year
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eBook (Download) Pride and Protest BY : Nikki Payne
E-Book Download Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne
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Ebook PDF Pride and Protest | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD If you want to download free Ebook, you are in the right place to download Ebook. Ebook/PDF Pride and Protest DOWNLOAD in English is available for free here, Click on the download LINK below to download Ebook After You 2020 PDF Download in English by Jojo Moyes (Author).
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Description
A woman goes head-to-head with the CEO of a corporation threatening to destroy her neighborhood in this fresh and modern retelling of Pride and Prejudice by debut author Nikki Payne.Liza B.--the only DJ who gives a jam--wants to take her neighborhood back from the soulless property developer dropping unaffordable condos on every street corner in DC. But her planned protest at a corporate event takes a turn after she mistakes the smoldering-hot CEO for the waitstaff. When they go toe-to-toe, the sparks fly--but her impossible-to-ignore family thwarts her every move. Liza wants Dorsey Fitzgerald out of her hood, but she'll settle for getting him out of her head.At first, Dorsey writes off Liza Bennett as more interested in performing outrage than acting on it. As the adopted Filipino son of a wealthy white family, he's always felt a bit out of place and knows a fraud when he sees one. But when Liza's protest results in a viral meme, their lives are turned upside down, and Dorsey comes
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mermaidsirennikita · 8 months
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Weekly Book Recs: 10/6-10/13
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Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne
Easily one of the best Pride and Prejudice retellings I've read, this takes our prickly leads and turns them into an activist versus a billionaire (who has a lot more going for him than "billionaire", believe). It's socially conscious, funny, and touching--and it captures the more melancholic aspects of P&P more than most reboots I've read. There's a real old school 90s-2000s romcom vibe to the fallout aspect of the book. Pick it up! #23for23
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Jana Goes Wild by Farah Heron
I blogged a bit about this one as I was reading it--and suffice to say, I was impressed. It's a risky premise--Jana and Anil have a two week fling during which she falls head over heels, finds out he's married, and, after blocking him on every platform possible, discovers she's knocked up... Cut to five years later, and they're co-parents of a daughter while seeing each other as little as possible. Until they end up a part of the same wedding party. At a destination wedding. In Tanzania. It's a big swing of a story, and with a charming hero (Anil and his daughter... my heart) and a heroine who's so hesitant to take a risk after being burned (but so drawn to her baby daddy) it really impressed me. I know this one is polarizing in romance circles; and if you're familiar with romance circles, you can guess why. Cardinal romance rules broken! The heroine isn't perfect and she's a woman of color so the standard has to be impossibly high! Whatever, man. This shit is good. #23for23
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Sinner by Sierra Simone
I read this a year ago and wasn't really feeling it, but gave it another shot when my mood shifted--and liked it a lot more this time around. I'd call this perhaps the most "approachable" Sierra Simone I've read so far--it's really a sex lessons/age gap/brother's best friend book, with the added bonus of the heroine being thisclose to becoming a nun. I won't lie--if you wanted to dip your toes into Sierra Simone's work, I think Priest is probably a more... accurate... representation of her standard fare (Sean Bell keeps going "I'm a bad man, my good brother Tyler over there on the other hand" and like. My guy. Sean. Tyler is OBSCENE.) but this one is quite good. And very, very hot. TW: Sean is a primary caretaker for his mother, who has terminal cancer. That is a big part of the book, and while I thought it was done beautifully, it is very sad.
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The Professional by Kresley Cole
Kresley Cole is one of those authors whose style was kind of made for mafia romance--over the top, super hot, and alpha to the nth degree. This is the first non-IAD book I've read by her, and though I was surprised by some differences (it's first person POV, single POV at that) it's a fucking romp, the way I expect a Kresley book to be. There's stalking-is-love, our hero kidnaps our heroine after watching her masturbate to the memory of him in the bathtub, there's a lot of good bit of kink. And it's a bodyguard romance, which I personally love. It's a little softer than some of the mafia romances I've read--but I am more than confident that the next book will be... different.
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A Rake's Vow by Stephanie Laurens
In theory, there isn't a lot that's super crazy about the plot of A Rake's Vow--it's basically a rake/resistant virgin book, with a light, fun mystery. But it's just so fun. The tone is perfect. Vane just wants this woman to marry him, because Fate demands it, damn it! And Patience is resistant for a reason I don't know that I've seen a lot, or at all in historicals--her father was a rake, and she doesn't want to end up like her heartbroken mother. (Also, she's raising her little brother and very Practical and doesn't want Vane to be a bad influence on him, and it's all very amusing.) This is a house party book without the party, full of a cast of quirky characters. At one point, he starts putting the moves on her in the conservatory and she's like "what are you doing" and he goes "you followed me into the CONSERVATORY". Like I said, it's so much fun. And Cynster men are conquerors--don't ever forget that.
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Never Met a Duke Like You by Amalie Howard
A funny, sexy retelling of Clueless (which is a retelling of Emma, and it all works). Out 11/14, read my full review here.
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