An Academic Affair (McAlister)
Feb. 8th, 2026 07:05 pmAnyway, this is unabashedly a romance novel, complete with marriage-of-convenience and sometimes even the one-bed trope, but without any particular kinks like professor/student :P But the thing that makes it interesting (to me) is that it's at least as interested in both the experiences of the precariat (*) and also familial relationships as it is in the romance itself. In fact, it does not have a conventional romantic Act 3; here the Act 3, as well as the understandable but frustrating misunderstandings that prolong it, is passed squarely on to the familial relationships rather than the romantic ones. Which I personally really like!
The two main characters, Jonah and Sadie, are adorably academics. (**) I laughed out loud when Jonah said, "I'm all for radically revised gender roles in the heteronormative institution of marriage, but I should still pay for my wife's engagement ring," if only because I've never heard anyone else talk that way in a romance novel -- though if you have, please rec it to me. (Their engagement is the aforementioned engagement-of-convenience and the ring is $27.99, I hasten to append, and she pays for his ring.) (lol, I think I actually paid for my engagement ring, because it was an important transaction involving me and an important piece of jewelry -- what?)
Anyway, I rarely like romance novels, but I liked this one!
(*) I did not know the term precariat: the precarious proletariat, that insecure class of unstable work and low wages -- but I was familiar at least by reputation with the academic pre-tenure-track life that the term describes, in the sense that it is one of the many reasons why I did not pursue academia
(**) Jonah likes using footnotes; I guess your mileage may vary but I found it adorable, perhaps inevitably
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Date: 2026-02-15 01:46 pm (UTC)Last year I read Kristyn J. Miller's Given Our History, where I was charmed by the flashback sections but driven off the wall by the depiction of academia; it didn't help that the flashback sections were the author writing from experience, while the present day sections were very much not from experience. Anyway this one sounds much better! (I have not read The Love Hypothesis because I was turned off by the premise.)
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Date: 2026-02-15 04:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2026-02-15 06:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2026-02-19 05:05 am (UTC)