My rating: 3.5 stars
I've been obsessed with Mary Read ever since I played AC: Black Flag, and while nobody can live up to that interpretation of Mary for me, I was really excited to read a book about her and see a different take. I found that the title matches the book beautifully, because it is truly first and foremost a story of Mary, and her discovering herself and what she wants.
Mary and Anne are both bisexual women living among pirate men in different ways. They both have relationships with and long for men for most of the book, but at the same time, there is a budding attraction between the two of them that eventually wins. While I don't think Mary is meant to be nonbinary, due to being forced to live her life as a man she had some "don't belong to either gender" feelings that were personally relatable to me as a nonbinary person.
One thing that kind of ruined my enjoyment was that... every single men in this book is absolute trash (except for Paddy, who is golden, and Jack and Nat, who are mostly decent). But seriously, everyone other than them is a misogynistic, homophobic trash, and while this might have been realistic, it was not enjoyable to read about. Anne was abused by her husband in the past and spends the second half of the book trying to break free of him for good, while Mary experiences violence both as a woman, and as someone thought to be a gay man.
The ending dragged on a little for me. This book has very short chapters, and when I saw from the page number that I'm towards the end, I had six different chapter ends where I thought "oh, that would be a pretty cool ending sentence" and then it wasn't. Everytime I thought this was the ending, the story just went on. In the end, I ended up really liking the /actual/ ending and how it all came full circle, but this was still a little strange.
One thing that might be interesting to people (especially people looking to fill a reading challenge prompt maybe... I've seen prompts like this before) is that this book has a dual timeline - there is a "present", but there are also several flashback chapters that detail how Mary ended up where she was at the beginning of the book. Without spoiling much, I can say that I really liked how these two timelines "interacted" with each other and supported each other.
I had some mixed feelings about the book, but overall I liked it. It could have been heavier on pirate adventures, but I liked Mary's character arc and discovering herself. Also, the cover is beautiful.
TW: physical abuse by spouse, (misdirected) homo- and transphobia, attempted sexual assault, general pirate-y things like violence and murder