Member Reviews
I received this also as an audiobook: here is my review for that :)
I enjoyed the story and the many many characters who were all very fun and lively but if not for the audiobooks and the different voices I suspect I'd have had a hard time keeping them all separate.
I loved the autistic and queer rep but the story at points was very slow and the end conflict cleared faster than expected. 10/10 narrator!
Thank you NetGalley for the audiobook!
Thank you, NetGalley for an advanced ARC of the audiobook & book for an honest review
I started reading this book today and it took me reading throughout the day to finish it (When I normally can listen to an audiobook in one go), but with this book, I found myself drifting in and out of interest for the story so had to take time away every few chapters.
In this story, we are following the main character who has Autism and how they see, feel and deal with things differently a lot of people do not understand them... but also they are dealing with grieving the death of their beloved sister who was loved by so many people as well as living on the moon. In this book, the autism representation I thought was OK but not brilliantly done and I feel a little more could have been explored in explaining it 🤔 since you are told a few times the main character has autism ( I am a person who would rather see what ur saying in the words rather than just saying the description or word to explain it).
This book was interesting in places but couldn't hold my full interest, but I do see others enjoying this book I was just not the target audience unfortunately but still enjoyed it in places
What a surprise Moon Dust in My Hairnet is! I just love the diversity of characters. JR Creaden gives us life on the moon that represents what we see around us and I love it.
Now with that said, oh there is drama. The overriding shadow over the story is the death of the main character’s sister that has had an impact on everyone’s lives as she was a visionary leader. The moon station and its plan for life was all Faraday’s idea. So not only are we dealing with the loss of someone who left a dynamic impact on the world, but then we have the familial impact of losing the only person who saw you. The story can get heavy at times. Creaden does not shy away from anyone’s loss.
There are also new relationships being pursued and fought against. I cannot even call them secondary characters because Lane’s new found family becomes just that: found family. I will say that I especially have a crush on Halle, Viveca’s girlfriend. It is too bad they are monogamous because I could totally see them with Lane.
Moon Dust has a mystery on the station. There is danger and intrigue involved. It is really good. The twists and turns are exciting. Creaden keeps us hopping. Plus, found family rocks this out.
I just love Moon Dust. I truly hope there is more with this crew…maybe as they explore more of space because they are awesome.
I enjoyed this a lot, but the first half definitely had the stronger writing. Towards the end, lots of story lines kind of jumbled together and the minimal world-building lead to several Dues Ex Machina moments, which was a shame. All in all, this was maybe a little too YA-leaning (although the MC is 20) for my liking. Everything resolved itself a bit too neatly, too sugary.
Still, this was a really fun read. The characters are super diverse and I loved the autism rep. The story itself is both cozy and gritty (for lack of a better word), in a mix that makes for pretty easy reading, though themes like grief, guilt, and mental health are very central to the story.
✨ This was an absolutely wonderful read! (Though I had a feeling this would be the case the moment I read the blurb.) I was guided gently into the story and then next minute I was fully sunk!
✨ I absolutely adored the main character Lane. Living in the shadow of her older - innovative and brilliant - sister who recently died, she is just trying to survive in her new life under pressure of both her parents and herself. Just trying to do the job close to what she loves and that she can do - cooking. There was something about her that felt so real to me.
✨So many of her mannerisms and her thought process that rang true for me - especially as she is so sweet and all over the place. She is an easily lovable character.
✨ I found the plot to be engaging, all leading up to some intense last chapters. I found the ending to be satisfying, and also sweet. Though I in no way wanted to finish reading this book!
✨There is so much too this story and to this world, I instantly wanted to know more about the characters and follow their story as I read. Especially with such lovely queer relationships threaded throughout. These didn’t take away from the plot but enhanced it, especially from Lane’s POV.
✨ I recommend this to anyone looking for a sci-fi novel with a gentle vibe and a lovely amount of flare, but not too much flash and bang (but just enough to keep things exciting!
Thank you to NetGalley, the author, and the publisher for sending me this free eARC (eAdvanced Reader Copy). I am leaving this review voluntarily. This title was published 19th April 2024.
This was a DNF for me. I just couldn't seem to get into this book after 2 attempts. I can't say anything was bad other than I just couldn't connect to the mc and the internal dialogue just didn't pull me in. I may try again in the future as this seems by all accounts a good book but it may just not be for me.
I’m going to be so real, I had no strong feelings on this one. I read it. It existed, and then it ended.
The premise for this book sounded very nice, but unfortunately, I just couldn't get into it properly. I had a hard time believing in the setting, and just couldn't connect with the characters enough to force myself to get through the second half of the book. The pacing felt a bit off, and the characters lacked in depth what they didn't lack in representativity. I'm disappointed, but will keep an open mind to any future works by this author!
Moon Dust in My Hairnet by J.R. Creaden was a story I wasn’t expecting to love so much. After curling up inside a lineup of fantasies, I was itching to dive into a sci-fi story that wouldn’t yank me into a massive series. This is a story that revolves around grief and an approaching war, but at the same time it managed to feel super cozy.
Lane is the younger sister of the famous Faraday Tanner, an inventor who was destined to lead humanity to a golden age. But she died, and now Lane is living beneath a blanket of survivor’s guilt. She’s not “special” like her sister was. She isn’t a genius, her parents want to coddle her because of her autism, and she doesn’t have the skills of the others around her. But when Lane is faced with a mystery surrounding missing goods, she knows that she’ll have to step up and become something more than a lunch lady in order to save her home.
Moon Dust in My Hairnet offers a refreshing representation of queer romance, autism, and polyamory, and I found myself deeply rooting for Lane and the other characters in this cozy sci-fi adventure. If you’re looking for a fast, cozy read, this is a book that needs to join your TBR!
I loved seeing so many different iterations of queer, spicybrained people in a hopeful future, but the pacing felt off - there was a lot of wheel-spinning for the first two thirds of the book, then everything happened at once (and I had to go back a few pages at one point to make sure I hadn't missed a crucial part of the plan. I hadn't) and...I don't know what else exactly it was that didn't entirely work for me. It kind of felt like it couldn't decide if it wanted to be cozy or political, tried to be both and as a result kind of ended up being neither. I really wanted it to lean into one or the other. Also, I called the sketchy people as soon as they were introduced, but that may be bc I read a whole fuck of a lot of related stories.
I, as an autistic multiple disabled person, really like this very disability heavy book with lots of disability themes (like infantilisation and the frustration with it) but it needs another rewrite to be even better. Most of the writing is good but some of the writing, pacing and story is off kilter and it pulls you out of the story to the point you can no longer follow along. It hurries and misses crucial info sometimes. It's a good book, just needs some polishing. And I loved all the twists and turns, how it picked up speed in the second half and kept you on your toes.
Thank you to NetGalley for providing me an ARC of this book for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
I ADORED this book. It was a lovely cozy sci-fi adventure, with fantastic autistic and poly representation to boot!
While the world was wonderful and so believable, the characters were what really shone through. Even the background characters clearly had their own lives and didn't seem to exist as just a backdrop for the story to take place.
I also REALLY appreciated the truthful representation of autism, particularly with Lane's character. Her autism was not represented by the extremes of infantilization or Savantism, but as a condition that makes some things about life difficult. I particularly loved the way her sensory issues and problems with social cues were highlighted without everyone around her only feeling pity. I also thought it was excellent that she responded to people in her life that infantilized her and treated her as less-than.
I also really enjoyed the representation of poly relationships. Not being poly myself, I certainly don't know all the intricacies of poly relationships, but I enjoyed that this book didn't only focus on the positives or the negatives, but rather a more realistic portrayal of both the highs and the lows in a poly relationship (also I absolutely adore the polycule in this book because they're all so good for each other ahhhh).
Truly a joy to read, and one I will happily reread and recommend to others!
Publication date: April 19, 2024
First of all, thank you so much to Netgalley and Mythic Roads Press for having this available in the "read now" section!
I am actually not a huge sci-fi reader, so normally I wouldn't have picked this book up. But I am trying to build a feedback ratio on netgalley and the description of the book said that the main character was autistic", so I decided to read it. And it has been one of the best decisions I have ever made.
I should clear up that this is not the typical hard sci-fi story. It's kind of a mix between a dystopian climate fiction and a sweet YA contemporary. We follow our main character Lane, the little sister of the most famous woman on earth, who invented the gravdrive, a device that made it possible for humanity to inhabit the moon and save themselves from the climate crisis that has devastated our planet. The problem is that that woman was killed by an enourmous dictatorial empire named the melt.
The book starts when Lane arrives to the first moon colony, without the sister that started it all and the melt trying to shut them down.
The book has an overall slow pace, we know there are dangerous things happening and that the stakes have never been higher for our main characters, but we are inmersed on Lane's head, which is mainly worried about getting through her every day life. The book, at least to me, felt very warm and cozy, we followed all the mundane things that happened in the day to day of the moon colony, and watching the protagonist coming of age through her own grief and fears. It's exactly the type of story that I adore reading, and this one felt more specific to me and my taste because it existed in a world where queerness, disability and racial diversity are the norm.
Probably, my favourite thing about the whole book were the characters. Every single one of them was incredibly well though out and developped troughout the novel, and the author was careful weaving their storylines through the plot, which I also really enjoyed.
Because, don't take me wrong, the sci-fi aspect was definitely there in the form of a mystery. It was complex, but very easy to comprehend at the same time. It was completely believable in what comes to our own near future, regarding our concerns with climate change and the treath of totalitarian rule over our modern democracy systems.
I would say that Moon Dust in My Hairnet's ultimate message is of hope, hope that everything will be okay, wether with our personal struggles or the ones that concern us all, and the trust we have to have in each other to make things happen. And those are some of my favorite things, so YES, give it a try, even if you are not a sci-fi reader.
Thank you NetGalley for the ARC.
I’ve spent a while trying to find the right words for a review that are never going to come, so buckle up, here we go. We love, love, love us some neurodivergent representation. So this book - slay. We also love healthy representation of different relationship styles without shame. Poly relationships that aren’t reduced to being all about sex and exploitation, even better. In fact, we loved that there was so much caring involved.
Now, as someone who has an amazingly complex relationship with grief, Lane’s story was actually a little bit healing for me. The way she was holding on to Faraday and through group came to the realisation that she didn’t know if she wanted to heal. It was through her friendships and relationships that she healed. I was in it for Lane’s healing story.
But the aggressors were more surprising than who the saboteurs were. Unless space travel had become more easy and I just missed that part? But as I said, I was more emotionally attached to Lane’s healing journey than I was to some buffoon trying to take over a lunar settlement.
This one was really relatable to me as I also have autism so the representing was there and I felt validated. There are great depictions of grief surrounding her sister and I really resonated on how Faraday felt like she fit into a very specific role in this new environment and how she eventually had to rise above to really get what she wanted and what was best for the colony. This was a really good book and I really liked Faraday as our main character.
Moon Dust in My Hairnet by JR Creaden
This is mainly a sci-fi story that takes in the future on the moon. Earth has experienced a cataclysmic event referred to as “the melt” and this group of settlers has left Earth and made a home on the moon. And I’d say roughly 70% of this is just Lane trying to balance her grief and trauma, her family, her boyfriend who’s suddenly avoiding her to spend time with his boyfriend, and potential new love for herself. There’s kind of a subplot about a traitor and a spy that really kicks into high gear in the last 30% of the book. In that sense, I wish that this chose one thing to be and was just that for the entire book. I wish it was either a slice of life sci-fi novel about Lane figuring out her new life, or a mystery/thriller novel where she has to find/outwit the spy and it’s all tense and exciting. The book kind of wants to have it both ways, and while I like and enjoyed this, I think it’d be a stronger book overall if it wasn’t trying to have its cake and eat it too. I like a lot of things that it did. I do love me some casual queerness/queer normativity and poly normativity, but the book takes a weird moment where it decides it has to explain why there’s queer/poly normativity and I honestly just don’t buy it. My suspension of disbelief broke so hard. There’s a few other places where, well, let’s say I’m skeptical.
All in all, I had a good time with this, even if there were certain parts I didn’t entirely buy into.
Thanks to NetGalley and Mythic Roads Press for a copy of this in exchange for an honest review.
Thank you to NetGalley, J.R Creaden and publisher for sending me a free ARC in exchange for an honest and fair review.
4.25/5*
I loved this book. From the beginning it had me hooked, and I didnt loose interest throughout it. The plot, while being fairly predictable, was entertaining and I didn't want to stop reading.
By far my favourite part is the relationships between the different characters. I love how there's so many different types of loving relationships shown, but all being viewed as equal and worthy. The main characters are polyamarous and for me (monogamous but very pro poly) I loved how this was done. It showed how this could be done lovingly between many people, but also showed the work that's needed for it to be healthy. My only issue here is that at some points it did seem a little unicorn hunting, but this disspeared later on. I also thought the conversations that were had between them helped a lot to negate this. All the main characters are very understanding with each other, and through therapy learn how to support each other the best they can.
I also loved how it turned initial first impressions on their head, along with reasons as to why people show their selves different ways that I really connected too. An example of this is V, who is immediately seen as a stuck up bitch who turns out to be such a caring soul who uses masks to protect herself.
There is a wide range of neurodivergence shown, and I feel like a lot of people will be able to identify with at least one person in the book if not more.I really related to Lane's issues with communicating properly, knowing what you mean in your head but being unable to express it properly and how that goes onto to effect the relationships with the people around you. I also related to her initially being against therapy due to feeling like you didn't deserve it, which I feel a lot of others will too.
As a massive astrophysics/space nerd who is terrified of destruction done to our planet, I loved the Luna setting. I loved seeing scientific advances been used for genuine good, with so much hope added. It's so easy for people to use science for profit no matter what (looking at you oil company's). But the genuine love and hope given to the world by a young genius is so inspiring for me, and something I feel like we need more of. This is such a hopeful book, and I love it.
My only real negatives for this book is that the bad guys weren't properly fleshed out for me. They seemed very generic, with the only major thing being touched on is Faraday's murder. I didn't connect with the character's fear for them and felt like in the end they went down very easily. I also noticed that black was the only ethnicity that was capitalised through, eg a white person vs a Black person, which came across very weird for me in a book all about inclusion and acceptance.
Overall, I love this book. I will definitely be recommending it to anyone who loves queer, spacey, hopeful books in anyway, and shall be shouting from the rooftops about it.
Goodreads categories:
Mood of the Book:
Adventurous
Inspiring
Emotional
Hopeful
Funny
Pacing:
Medium
Plot or Character Driven:
Character
Is there strong character development?:
Yes
Do you find the characters loveable?
Yes
Is there a diverse cast of characters?
Yes
Are the flaws of the main characters a part of the book?
Yes
Lane is an autistic lunar lunch lady dealing with loss and adjusting to her new home on the moon, all while juggling relationships and dealing with threats from a dangerous overlord.
I really enjoyed this book. It deals with grief, mental illness, disabilities, and relationships (romantic and familial).
It's fun and emotional, adventurous and cozy. There's a lot packed into this book, and i think Creaden does it well.
There were a few things that felt clumsy and pulled me out of the story, but overall, it was fantastic. I really appreciated the autistic representation, being autistic myself, and i related to both Lane and V. I will definitely be reading more from this author in the future.
This is a review from Netgallery
So many of the books I've read lately have felt quite samey but THIS feels refreshingly original and new
The writing and voice caught and snagged me immediately, probably because the author is also autistic
The exploration of grief from an autistic lens made my heart ache with sympathy
"How was I supposed to wish for anything else again, when nothing would change that she was gone and I wasn't?" 😭😭
One of my favorite aspects was the epitaths that listed the food and beverages for the day
The way her parents infantilized her was enraging and so relatable
I'm an avid cook so all of the descriptions about cooking were glorious to me
The conflicts Lane has with her mother are so relatable they were almost difficult to read
The polyamory was definitely very interesting to read, even though it wasn't my favourite
The meltdowns were so relatable
The growing sense of unease was palpable
The book is definitely cozy but the steaks feel quite serious and tense
CW
-abuse
-overdose
-meltdowns/shutdowns
I thought the premise for this book was interesting but I did not get on with the main character’s personality and their voice. I understand they are autistic, that is absolutely fine as I am autistic myself, but it seemed like the author had researched autism through watching shows that portray autism in an over the top manner (see The Big Bang Theory).
Regardless, I enjoyed the plot, the voice seemed childlike even for a YA, and some of the characters were well written.