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Love In Low Gravity: A lesbian holiday space romance Kindle Edition

3.6 out of 5 stars 13 ratings

Can they catch hold of happiness before it floats away?

Space station school teacher Ada Solomon spends her free time drinking coffee with her best friend and people watching. When she catches sight of a gorgeous stranger Ada is immediately intrigued, and once they meet a flirtation quickly grows.

If only they could move past friendship...

Vivienne Lambert is looking forward to a quiet life on Belco-Psyche station. She misses Paris, but not her old life as a crime syndicate lawyer.

An attractive new friend saves her from loneliness, but her secrets stop her from pursuing her desire...

Fly away for the holidays with this short, romantic read with plenty of spice and a dash of sci-fi!

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Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B09M7KMFTZ
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Carnation Books (December 16, 2021)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ December 16, 2021
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 787 KB
  • Simultaneous device usage ‏ : ‎ Unlimited
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 121 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.6 out of 5 stars 13 ratings

About the author

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Storm Caywood
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Storm Caywood is a lesbian writer of sapphic sci-fi. She spends too much time watching Star Trek and drinking iced coffee, and not enough time traveling. She currently lives in Rochester, NY with her partner and their dogs and cat.

Customer reviews

3.6 out of 5 stars
13 global ratings

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2022
    Love in Low Gravity is a science fiction romance—much more romance than science fiction, with low conflict and a gentle pace.

    The book is set two hundred years in the future, and humans have settled Mars, Ceres, and a number of space stations. But organized crime and corporate greed make the future far from utopian.

    Ada, from Ceres, is a teacher on a small mining station, struggling to get through to rowdy, educationally-neglected children. Vivienne, from Paris on Earth, arrives on the station to run a little import shop. But she’s hiding a shady past.

    Despite the dystopian hints and the darkness in Vivienne’s past, most of the book consists in light conversations, fun, and travel. The relationship escalates slowly with only one real conflict. There are several brief but explicit sex scenes, which I found pretty hot.

    This book would appeal to romance fans more than science fiction fans, since the heart of the story is in the relationship, not any of the problems in the characters’ world. Yet, as a science fiction fan, I did enjoy the descriptions of the various settings (the mining station, Ceres, Mars, and Earth).

    Ada is Jewish, so we see Jewish holidays alongside secular Christian holidays and new holidays invented by the space station dwellers. Lots of holidays to enjoy with the different families!

    This is not the kind of book that rips out your heart and stomps in it. It’s a gentle story where everyone is trying their best and you feel sure they’ll work things out in the end. It’s also not a long read. This might be a good quick read for when you need something light and mostly happy.
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2021
    This new release is an interesting twist on a traditional romance, taking place on a small mining station in space. Ada is a teacher working on the station with disadvantaged kids and limited resources. Vivienne left her life on Earth -- and a questionable past -- to take over her uncle's business on the small station. There is an instant attraction between them, and a flirty friendship becomes a journey to something more.

    The author does a great job of creating interesting characters with rich backgrounds. Their passions, chemistry, and struggles are believable and compelling. As always, Caywood shines in writing intimacy in her relationships, and the connection, concern, and caretaking between her main characters are well-drawn and lovely to see.

    This is an excellent mix of traditional romance, intrigue, and sci fi in a creative and novel environment. It is a fun and interesting read, and I can't recommend it enough!
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2022
    As always, Storm Caywood writes characters that are easy to fall in love with as you watch their relationship grow. Vivienne has arrived on a small mining station to take over her uncle’s store. She’s fleeing a dark past on Earth. She meets Ada, a teacher born in space, who has come to teach middle grade. They have a strong attraction but can Vivienne leave her past behind to build a future with Ada?

    Recommended for fans of romance with realistic, complicated characters. The science fiction elements are there but the romance is compelling enough that anyone looking for a great lesbian romance will be drawn in, even if they usually don’t read sci-fi
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2022
    LGBTQ+ sci-fi is one of my favorite genres, so when the author offered me a copy of this book for review, I was thrilled to accept!

    Right off the bat, I love the concept of the separate settings and their affect on the culture and people within them. The idea that the constraints of each of the colonies (from disparate levels of gravity, to what luxuries they can afford) affects the characters that grew up in them feels very realistic to me. It makes the space station, something still inherently fantastical, seem realer.

    The romance between our leads felt apparent from the get go. The attraction was there almost instantly and the steamy scenes between the two of them are properly... well, steamy. I also liked the fact there was another sapphic couple, for some extra wlw fun. Pax is probably who I am as a person, so I gravitated towards her the most. But Vivienne and Ada were both intriguing characters in their own right.

    The only thing that was holding the story back, and the reason I took off a star, was the length. It can be tricky to make a sci-fi novella that doesn't feel like a sci-fi novel shoved into tighter constraint. And you could see the constraints here There was a lot of time spent on the worldbuilding, which I really liked, but there were times the romance felt rushed. For example, when the two first meet you only get a taste of their first conversation and then a quick wrap up in the narrative. I would have rather seen the full conversation to get a proper look at the beginnings of the romance. The 3rd act conflict also felt slightly rushed and solved a bit too soon. I would have liked more time to really delve into Vivienne's struggle to outrun her past and Ada having to grapple over the idea of being with someone who had done shady things.

    That being said, I can't really fault a book for making me want more of it. And for all the little time that was spent in the world, it does feel realized. I would love to see what the author could do with more time to really flesh out a sci-fi world.

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