by Morgan Dante
The Storygraph link for this book contains information such as page count, publication date, and community-created content warnings.
Providence Girls by Morgan Dante is a standalone sapphic novella set in H. P. Lovecraft's cosmic horror universe in the 1930s and 40s. The story is a slow burn buildup of the romantic relationship between Lavinia Vin
Whateley, an SA and incest survivor who fled from Dunwich, Massachusetts to East Providence in Rhode Island, and Asenath Azzie
Waite who abandoned her hometown of Innsmouth for East Providence in an attempt to escape the slow transformation of her body and mind into an eldritch being of the sea.
I really loved this book! The prose is luscious but curt, using a lot of short, sharp sentences full of vivid description. The opening scene of Vin fleeing her murderous father (who intended to sacrifice her to a Great Old One after she bore its hybrid children at his… behest) and getting lost and delirious in the wilderness of New England is beautiful but unforgiving. Everything is described, from the bird calls and inquisitive wet nose of a bear cub to the infected cut on Vin's foot that oozes pus and blood.
The chapters bounce between the first-person POVs of Vin and Azzie, who are both writing down their thoughts of each other. They often address each other in their respective sections, reflecting on their relationship with one another and how it developed over the course of less than a year. The story is very slow in the beginning and middle, focusing on the humdrum daily affairs of Vin learning to be her own person outside of her abusive father's shadow and Azzie slowly opening her heart to her new housemate as her transformation progresses. The tension between Azzie and Vin grows stronger with every page, and feels realistic for two women who have been deeply wounded but nonetheless crave intimacy and trust.
A lot of this book concerns itself with the misogynistic violence that was present in the earlier half of the 20th century in America, as well as with the misogyny that is present in Lovecraft's writing and universe. Both Vin and Azzie rail against it in their own ways, but are constrained by their gender and society. A quote: [The doctor] was only here to ensure you weren't dead. Women disappeared sometimes, and their fathers and husbands were never questioned because what they did with their women was their business.
Azzie is mentioned as being the only woman to have graduated from Miskatonic University.
The entire book feels less like a love letter to Lovecraft's work and more of a critique of it, an exploration of the women who so often fall through the cracks in these narratives. We see this in Azzie's unnamed mother, a Deep One who forsook the sea and the eldritch glory of the ocean floor in order to be exiled to the attic of her human husband's home—all for the sake of watching her daughter grow up on land.
Overall, I absolutely adored this book. The romance between Vin and Azzie is beautiful and heart-wrenching at the same time, as Azzie's transformation drives her to the edge of death on land—and yet she, like her mother, does her best to ignore the sea for the sake of a loved one. There is definitely sapphic monster fucking here, as well as discussions of what it means to be a monster in someone's eyes. Providence Girls is a delicious, slow burn meditation on the Cthulhian mythos and sapphic romance within it, and I greedily devoured every word.
Find this book on Amazon Kindle.
Have you read Providence Girls? Do you want to? If you have any questions or thoughts about the book, feel free to leave a comment in the box down below!