![]() To Aaron, Thomas represents hope – and more? And threaded through the story, talk of a near-miraculous process offered by the Leteo Institute: the selective rewriting and deletion of memories.Ī coming-of-age story, then, lifted by the generous peppering of a gritty setting and a dollop of SF mustard. Aaron’s father killed himself his mother barely manages his other friends run hot and cold, often violently. A Bronx teen, Aaron Soto, struggles to figure himself out, torn between his girlfriend and a new, male best buddy, Thomas. ![]() I don’t remember reading anything like it before. ![]() One blurb-skim later it plonked into my basket. I scrolled down, and saw a cover lacking both beef and cake. Amazon opened its unwashed mac to show me a barely distinguishable selection of beefcake covers, and if you’ve read any of my books you’ll understand that’s not the sort of thing I write and it’s not my preferred reading material either. ![]() ![]() Having finished Exo I saw the next few on my official to-read pile weren’t going to change that, so as a Christmas treat I decided to sneak in something new. It’s been a while since I’ve read an LGBT-themed book. Please excuse the colour cast and the delicately distributed muck on top of my fridge. ![]()
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