Danika Reviews Silent Heart by Claire McNab

Posted on the 14 May 2016 by Lesbrary @lesbrary

When I visited New York for the first time, I knew had to take a look at The Strand. It didn't disappoint, but I probably got the most enjoyment out of perusing the sale racks out front of the store. When I found an old lesbian romance for a dollar, I couldn't resist, especially given the premise: an up-tight professor's academic book on Victorian erotica becomes an unexpected bestseller. (And when she's interviewed by a pushy, maddening, lesbian reporter-sparks fly!) I picked it up during the 24 readathon thinking that a fluffy, cheesy romance would be just the thing for a light read. That is probably true, but Silent Heart is not that.

The story begins as Victoria starts her book tour, and what amused me about her interviews is that although this book was written in 1993, it predicts to some extent the surprise erotic bestseller that did happen: 50 Shades of Grey. The media's reaction is fairly similar to the book's depiction, though it was more fanfic that academic.

What I wasn't expecting from this book, though, was the darkness and complexity. Victoria is unaware of her own queer desires in the beginning of the novel, but she does acknowledge her lukewarm relationships with men. They don't use the word "asexual", but she is uncomfortable with sexual contact with any gender. It begins to come out that she has repressed some trauma in her childhood that makes any sexual contact triggering.

The romance between Reyne-the reporter-and Victoria wasn't something I was completely sold on. At the outset, Reyne seemed more pushy sexually and romantically than I felt comfortable with, though she becomes more understanding by the end of the novel.

I don't think Silent Heart got a fair chance with me, because I was expecting (and hoping for) something light and enjoyable, and this narrative can be bleak and unsettling.

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To give proper trigger warnings for this novel means also giving spoilers, but I'd rather do that, so trigger warnings for rape, child molestation, incest, and child pornography.

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