ROOTED LITERARY MAGAZINE

Review: Pastoral by Osho Winston

A Steaming Mug of Cinnamon Tea in Novel Form – Warm and Comforting, with Just the Right Amount of Kick.

Pastoral is a cozy thriller novel by Osho Winston. We follow Diana, a young woman who was left partially paralyzed by a freak accident in her youth, as she navigates societal pressure to settle down and fall in love with a nice, normal man. Desperate to break the monotony of her life, she takes up a new role at The Little Bee, a beautiful flower shop in town. But is the mysterious and dashing gentleman owner too good to be true? And even if he is as perfect as he seems, is this really the life Diana has always wanted?

“Thick, tall, grass, spaced-out homes, a night sky that still was speckled with stars. There was not as much smog here, so the blue and black stretched out like a stew of the cosmos.”

In Pastoral, Winston tackles some very heavy issues. The exploration of “compulsory heterosexuality” in particular was thoughtful and delicately handled, very authentically representing the lived experience of so many young queer people. For a trigger warning, the book does also feature some brutal bigotry against same-sex relationships and non-binary identifying people, though no slurs are used. This comes from a place of religious hatred, something that is unfortunately all too relatable for many. Still, the novel itself manages to feel like a safe space, making room for authenticity and openheartedness to win out in the end.

“And when there were no more tears to cry, she started baking up a plan.”

The main plot of the novel is an intriguing mystery, making the book difficult to put down. Winston works in subtle hints to the book’s denouement throughout, though they went over this reader’s head, everything fell into place in the final scenes, which were executed perfectly, wrapping the book up in a thoroughly satisfying conclusion.

“Know what’s yours, Leta had told her.”

Pastoral, out now, is available in hardback and paperback formats via Amazon.

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Review: Pastoral by Osho Winston

In Pastoral, Winston tackles some very heavy issues. The exploration of “compulsory heterosexuality” in particular was thoughtful and delicately handled, very authentically representing the lived experience of so many young queer people. Read the full review.

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Review: Dark Sisters by Kristi DeMeester

As you read Dark Sisters, it is impossible to avoid conjuring up comparisons to horror greats, such as Stephen King or Shirley Jackson, who have mastered the ability to make your skin crawl with grotesque images presented in a disturbingly casual way. The witchy horror novel by Kristi DeMeester weaves an interconnected tale of three generations of women battling with matrilineal curses (and blessings) that threaten to rot their bodies from the inside out. Dark Sisters is deliciously disgusting, unapologetically over the top, and leaves your skin crawling.

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Review: Cities of Smoke and Starlight by Alli Earnest

Lovers of Treasure Planet, The Mummy, and Anastasia rejoice! Alli Earnest’s science fantasy novel Cities of Smoke and Starlight is the steampunk adventure you didn’t know you were looking for! Earnest not only creates an electric world readers find themselves lost in and a catalogue of sharp-tongued, adventure-seeking characters, but a rich history and mythology that both the readers and main characters explore together as they uncover lost (or perhaps hidden) secrets.

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Review: When We Feel We Exist by Dre Hill

Dre Hill’s When We Feel We Exist is an intimate collection of poems that slap you in the face with life’s enormity whilst quietly urging you to continue on as you were – on the condition that you notice.
This collection of poetry goes against the grain of Hill’s previous works, which historically evolved around black identity, love, loss and mental health. When We Feel We Exist is Dre Hill’s love letter to life itself. Not so much a collection of poems that flow onto the next, but a mosaic of heartfelt moments lovingly curated by Hill that, when presented side-by-side, symbolize so much more than the sum of their parts.

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