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Reviews tagging 'Suicidal thoughts'

All Princesses Die Before Dawn by Quentin Zuttion

2 reviews

peterparker's review

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challenging hopeful lighthearted medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

The main thing that intrigued me and brought me to read this book was its description. There are so few books about queer kids finding out who they are at such a young age and I’m so glad this exists. The book takes place over a day and deals with a family and their separate struggles. The main character Lulu struggles by not being very interested in traditional boy things and imagines what it would be like to kiss a boy. His teenage older sister struggles with being in love with someone who doesn’t necessarily love her back for the right reasons. Meanwhile their mother is struggling to get through to their father who didn’t come home last night. 

This book has a lot of heavy material so I would recommend going through reviewers content warnings as at certain times during the book I had to pause to collect my thoughts. It’s still a really good book just very emotional and heavy topics that I’m glad are being talked about. 

When I first started reading I thought the art was ok but then as the book went on it became amazing. The art style is simple yet striking in certain scenes. The way it conveys complex emotions in later scenes is beautiful. I wasn’t looking at the art through the right lens at first and definitely came around to it more. 

One thing that I thought was really clever about this book was framing all the family problems at the same time we are seeing clips of Princess Diana’s tragic death. The framing for that is brilliant and sticks the landing as Lulu figures out who he is as Princess Diana was such an icon to the queer community. I also love the hopeful ending as the family really goes through a lot during this day.

I received a free eARC from the author/publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

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james1star's review

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emotional hopeful fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

Thank you to NetGalley and Europe Comics for a review copy of this graphic novel in exchange for an honest review. 

This is a very solid 4 ⭐️ book for me. The central plot takes place over one hot, end of summer day from the perspectives of Lulu, his sister Cam and their mum. It starts with the news of Princess Diana’s death but each character is more focused on their own dramas: discovering one’s sexuality and gender identity and first love for another boy, a relationship with an older boy who she’s falling for but is being used, and a failing marriage respectively. This day will prove to be a decisive one for each of them and Zuitton uses a ‘slice of life’ approach to show this. There are some heavier themes touched on but not explicitly mentioned, I believe to cater to a larger audience and younger demographic, specifically those of Lulu’s and Cam’s ages (7-16) where such topics should be taught and I believe are handled well. I know the story is based in part on some truth, the author’s childhood and family but it is a very universal portrayal of coming to terms with one’s sexuality - lots of relatability and, albeit not one-for-one, comparisons I personally could make. I loved how Lulu tried to experience his dreams playing with princess dolls and childhood games using his imagination - there’s a certain bit where you can so perfectly understand what’s going on inside his mind and it’s captured amazingly. 

The graphic elements were truly mesmerising and beautiful. There is a recurring use of light and water which adds a dreamlike, ethereal notion but it’s undoubtedly clear to the reader that the basic is firmly grounded in the real world. The characters are honestly very developed despite taking place over a single day, you get to know them and they’re slightly flawed but lovable. It definitely makes you want to know more about them, another instalment would be amazing but as it is, I’m happy. 

My only real qualm was that the length didn’t really allow that much discussion or exploration of some of the topics. This means that some plot lines left us with loose ends -  which yes leads to ambiguity - that I kind of wanted more focus on. The impact is somewhat lessened but overall I would most definitely recommend this book and I am intrigued to check out more of Zuitton’s works. 

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