![]() ![]() ![]() Friday has to navigate her feelings for El, her professional life and opinions as a line supervisor at the factory who is getting dragged ever deeper into management politics, and how it all interconnects with her small town life. One of the union reps, El, catches Friday’s eye. ![]() Conditions are rough in the factory, there’s rumors of a buyout, the annual Pork Festival is coming up and emotions are high, and in the midst of all of this a couple of “union agitators” roll into town to try to drum up interest in unionizing the factory. Hoosier Daddy features Jill “Friday” Fryman as she works in a factory in her small hometown. Still, it was good to read a queer romance set more off the beaten path, as you will. ![]() It proved to be an interesting read, although the fate of the factory was, at times, more interesting to me than the fate of the main romance. A lesbian romance about union organizing? Set in Indiana? With a pun for a title? As a queer lady whose roots are in Indiana and whose friends have recently organized a union drive, I had to read it. I was perusing Hoopla’s queer romance section since I have been on a romance kick lately, and I came across Hoosier Daddy by Ann McMan and Salem West. ![]()
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