Hi! The Lady and Bandit was recently recommended to me after I made a post about books and movies featuring unconventionally looking / conventionally unattractive heroines. I hope you don’t mind because I don’t mean this in a negative way. I love female protagonists that don’t conform to (modern) beauty standards. I’m reallly interested how and why you decided for Pepita to look the way she does. How does this impact her character? How important is it to herself and to people around her? Thx!

liberlibelulaart:

Hello!
It is true, the heroine of The Lady and the Bandit is overweight. But, to be honest, it wasn’t my intention to convey a message about body-positivity –not explicitly, at least.

It came out naturally. I only wanted a protagonist that didn’t look exactly like the hundreds I’ve found in the romance novels I’ve read; one with a different kind of beauty, but who wasn’t conventionally attractive. (I’d disagree, for her facial features are, to me, timeless and pretty. But that’s the mystery of beauty; everyone has their own tastes).

So I turned to classical statues from Ancient Greece and Rome and got her facial features from there. Old paintings from 2-3 centuries ago –specifically Ruben’s– were a great source of inspiration, if not for the period the novel’s set in, at least for Pepita’s aesthetics. She has black, curly hair, though, inherited from her Spanish mother, unlike Ruben’s golden-haired ladies.

I mean, these women must have been deemed desirable enough to be immortalized in works of art! 😀

(I think Pepita is a bit chubbier than these ladies, though)

Does this have effect on her personality? Well, she doesn’t consider herself very pretty. She knows that she’s overweight, perhaps a bit more than she’d like, but that doesn’t make her lose sleep. She has a group of close friends who support each other and tell her that her extra pounds make her look “healthy and classical”, so that’s fine by her.

Now, Rafael, the dashing hero of the story, finds her attractive for many reasons, and one of them is her body type. He doesn’t care much for girls’ sizes, but something about Pepita’s chubbyness just “clicks” with her overall look, and he likes her whole: the combination of her eyes, her hair, her skin, body and personality; and the sudden changes she brings into his life.

Some nasty people, of course, make jokes about her fatness, and that hurts her. Not because of the content of their words, but because they’re aimed to hurt and undermine her self-esteem, and Pepita can’t stand such vileness.

So, Pepita is overweight, indeed, but it’s not really a problem for her. She gets tired faster when running up a hill (who doesn’t?), feels the weather’s heat a wee bit more, and doesn’t really believe people when they tell her she’s beautiful, though she appreciates their well-meaning intentions.

I don’t know if this is the answer you were looking for, but thank you
so much for asking!
If you have any more questions, feel free to ask 😀

  • Thank you for this great and detailed answer! That was exactly what I wanted to know. 😀 She sounds like a great character. Can’t wait to read the book!

Hello Ohtze! Could you recommend other media that features the Usurper and the Holy Mother/Queen trope? I mean specifically stuff that you really like for one reason or another and/or caters to the female gaze. I’d really love to see similar narratives play out in different settings. Also thank you for your fantastic meta. IT BLEW MY MIND – intellectually AND emotionally.

ohtze:

Top one I’m gonna recommend right now is Crown of Stars series by Kate Elliot. High Fantasy/Romance, heavy, heavy Usurper/Holy Mother, and pretty blatant about the tropes it’s using.

Like Sanglant (the Usurper) literally gets chained up with the war dogs and straight-up kidnaps Liath from his father (mutual kidnapping? fake kidnapping? IDK those two crazy kids are really into each other). Sanglant is hot af I still have dreams about this dude, man, like fuckin’ wild ass bastard prince whose mamma was some sort of fairy demon who seduced the king then abandoned both of them once she popped him out. Sanglant is always getting in trouble with daddy but daddy can’t bear to put him aside because he’s still in love with Sanglant’s mom, and Sanglant is just MAD CRAZY about Liath, like he straight up loses his shit and almost wrecks the entire kingdom it’s GREAT.

Anyways, very long series, very good, haven’t read it for awhile. It’s at least seven books and each book is over 500 pages? Me and the gals should probably cover it on @metamashina cuz it’s right up our alley.

Ohhh, thank you! That sounds just perfect. To my shame I have to add that I’ve never even heard about it but this seems to be exactly the kind of book I try to find when I need a certain itch scratched. 🙂