To cope with rising misogynist violence, the US government offered people a golden opportunity: any man who felt like they were owed a free woman could move to a remote island and be given one. The offer was, of course, a trap. Five years later, wise-cracking special ops mercenary Mankiller Jones and their companion Dr. Morrison venture to Incel Island on an important mission for the military, and in the process become the first women (or people perceived as women) the inhabitants of Incel Island have seen in years. Along with a ragtag group of Nice Guys, Mankiller and Dr. Morrison encounter hordes of CHUDs, Volcels, Betas, and the King of the Incels himself as they try to escape the island prison.
On Incel Island, somebody’s about to get laid…to rest.
This book is exactly what you think it is: a snarky non-binary special ops agent dispatched to shoot their way through an internet meme island prison for shitty dudes. Pulpy, amusing, doesn't outstay its welcome.
Margaret Killjoy hits another homerun in the superb owl of being a badass
5 stars
Margaret Killjoy is my favorite person ever. She could write a thousand page techical manual on...I don't know some sportsball thing, or something about cars. Anyways, my point is that she could write something that bores me and I'd read it from cover to cover in a day.
Escape from Incel Island is not a technical manual on something I dislike. It is a satirical take on gender norms and the dipshits who are incapable of viewing the world past the tip of their micropenis'.
I loved every word of this novella. Most of the main characters are both lovable and relatable. Kevin is basically me in my late 20's, before I realized that not only do I want to protect these people, but I am one of these people.
After you are finished reading this book, buy another copy for any incels in your life. Maybe they can find …
Margaret Killjoy is my favorite person ever. She could write a thousand page techical manual on...I don't know some sportsball thing, or something about cars. Anyways, my point is that she could write something that bores me and I'd read it from cover to cover in a day.
Escape from Incel Island is not a technical manual on something I dislike. It is a satirical take on gender norms and the dipshits who are incapable of viewing the world past the tip of their micropenis'.
I loved every word of this novella. Most of the main characters are both lovable and relatable. Kevin is basically me in my late 20's, before I realized that not only do I want to protect these people, but I am one of these people.
After you are finished reading this book, buy another copy for any incels in your life. Maybe they can find their way past the aforementioned tips.