![]() ![]() Shades of Milk and Honey has a plot familiar to fans of Austen-Jane Ellsworth, an unmarried woman of twenty-eight, is an intelligent woman of accomplishment who, now being an “old maid” (although she still hopes), focuses more on making sure that her younger sister, Melody, whose main accomplishment is her stunning beauty, is settled with a proper gentleman. ![]() But when I consulted Twitter, Mary Robinette Kowal herself suggested her book first, so I kind of had to-although, admittedly, I was looking for an excuse. ![]() Rearranging and redecorating my room at home has managed to clear most of the burnout out (oddly enough), and I thought I’d read Evening’s Empire or Love in a Fallen City, two other books I’d picked up at the same time, before picking up Shades of Milk and Honey. When I encountered Shades of Milk and Honey at my local library, I just had to pick it up, despite my fantasy burnout. Shades of Milk and Honey by Mary Robinette Kowal ![]()
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