

In a live radio debate, the chairman of the Swedish Federation for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights accused Destroyer editor Karl Andersson of "giving gay people a bad name", an accusation they stood by when questioned by international LGBT media. Contentsĭestroyer was subjected to massive criticism by the gay establishment in Sweden, because of its young male models. The magazine contained features, essays, interviews, reviews, columns, culture articles, fiction and sexually suggestive shots of boys as young as 13. It’s about Blackness and blackness and what both might look like under different circumstances.Destroyer – Journal of Apollonian Beauty and Dionysian Sexuality was a Swedish-based gay magazine published by Karl Andersson, with the objective "to bring back the adolescent boy as one of the ideals of gay culture". It’s about power and colonialism mother and daughters the cost of safety. This is a book about monsters and saviors – and how thin the line can be between the two. What makes Destroyer of Light such compelling reading is all of the other layers Brissett adds. One region has most of the technology, one grows most of the food, and one is a frozen frontier where might most definitely makes right.Īs you’d anticipate, the plot involves Cora learning about what she can do and why it is important to the planet’s future. To add to the dynamic, the resources on the ships were to be shared equally. But a few made less sense, like that given to Cora, a young girl. Most were straightforward, like the ability to quicken seeds. Once they made planetfall, they discovered how these changes gave each person a special talent suited for their new life. Ships were launched and the people on them were genetically modified while in cold sleep.

If this is a subject you’d rather not be involved with right now for whatever reason, know that this is not the title you should pick up.įour hundred years ago, humans were driven from the Earth by the krestge, an alien population that exists in more than three dimensions. Not because my review will contain any, but because this book definitely does. I’m going to drop a trigger warning for sexual violence in right here. Brissett has built a story that the 21st century needs, while never forgetting its roots in the Afrofuturism of a previous generation. If you can make it through the disorienting (somewhat intentionally because there is a lot of world building to do) first couple dozen pages, the reward is vast. Jennifer Marie Brissett’s Destroyer of Light is a book that sneaks up on you. Destroyer of Light, Jennifer Marie Brissett ( Tor 978-5-5, $25.99, 304pp, hc) October 2021.
