Conundrum, Isu Yin
Conundrum, Isu Yin
List: $12.99 | Sale: $9.10
Club: $6.49

Conundrum

Author: Isu Yin, Fae Yang

Narrator: Wendy Wolfson

Unabridged: 10 hr 25 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/04/2022


Synopsis

The Web is unraveling, but who will survive? Who gets to pick and choose the worthy from the wicked?Know this: everything that has happened, is happening, and will happen again.WINNER: Pinnacle Book Achievement AwardAll that came before has drawn in the players of this vicious game. The Queen’s Dog, Akira, must overcome the darkness within to face the dangers outside. Along with his faithful companion—and occasional cat—Besil, he dives into dangerous waters to fight the tides of change, with no idea if his battle will end in victory or tears. It’s a terrible Conundrum, but then again, so is Akira.EVOLVED PUBLISHING PRESENTS the second book in Grims' Truth, a truly epic series that will sweep you into a whole new universe.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Flo

I'm surprised that there isn't more talk about this book, especially during Pride Month. Written in 1974, it is one of the first books that discusses what it means to be trans. It is much less outdated than people say and surprises with the naturalness of the transition from male to female during th......more

Understanding my identity as a transwoman came about for me in the late 2000's, and thus most of what I read and learned from was on the internet and not set down in ink and binding. Of the trans memoirs I've held in my hands, this ties with Jamison Green's Becoming a Visible Man as my favorite. Whe......more

What a story! Superficially it's a tale of gender affirmation. But so much more. It's revelatory to hear how author Morris came to understand that she was in the wrong body. But during the many years of what she calls her conundrum, she joins the army, travels widely, marries and fathers five childr......more

Goodreads review by Rachel

The book as a whole is primarily of interest for historical reasons, and the second half is largely a desperate attempt to reassure a patriarchal society that her transition was no threat to it. That's an understandable response to the pressures Ms. Morris must have been under in her time and place,......more