![]() ![]() Okay, so I was mostly on board with Bingo Love until it turned out to be The Notebook with queer women. Abandon hope all ye who enter here and all that jazz! And… That’s the most I can say about it without spoiling anyone. ![]() The dialogue was quite stilted, but some of the conversations – especially the ones about boundaries–were pretty good. I liked how supportive and loving Hazel’s children were eventually, although the fact that Hazel gets homophobia from all generations of her family is upsetting. The art is fantastic, I especially love the way that the colours are done, everyone’s looks are excellent. It’s a second-chance romance Mari and Hazel meet again in their sixties and decide to pick up where they left off as teenagers when their homophobic families forcibly separated them. I’m pretty sure that I can’t discuss Tee Franklin and Jenn St-Onge’s Bingo Love without spoilers, because the things that naffed me off the most about it are all massive honking spoilers. ![]()
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