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Queens of Geek was amazing and I loved it! I loved all the representation in it and I loved all the characters (except Reese, what an asshole). I loved the story and just generally pretty much everything about it, especially all the fandom stuff. I just loved reading about people my age who are just as passionate about fandom things as I am. It made me feel understood. The reason my rating is 4 stars and not 5 is Charlie and Alyssa. I loved them and was rooting for their relationship to work out, but the relationship felt wayy too fast. I mean, they had never even met and they were moving so fast! It just felt like the relationship was really rushed and because of that didn't really work for me. Otherwise, amazing book!
Queens of Geek is an unexpectedly Goodread. With only 262 pages and generous line and margin spacing, it’s also a nice quick read. It follows the activities of three friends over a few days while they are at a Pop Culture festival. It doesn’t need to be a 700 page book as not much can realistically occur in a few days. It’s a nice length, however I did find that the timing of the last few chapters sped up and it got a bit too happy ending-y, like it was in a rush to wrap everything up. The ending also had a fair amount of cheese factor, even the characters were commenting on how their dialogue was cheesy. However it was short lived and maybe that’s what I want from a short book. Something to entertain me and leave me feeling good.
Often in contemporary YA books, I feel that Adult authors are clunky when they write about technology and Pop Culture. It’s almost like the publishers give the author a checklist of buzz words they are contracted to mention to make it modern enough to sell. This book didn’t have that. All technology and Pop Culture references felt organic. It was believable when the characters stopped to text or post online. It felt like the author really is a tech user herself and understands the prolific use of technology by teens.
I really enjoyed Taylor as a character. I found her very relatable and her mental health struggles to be eerily accurate. Again, it feels that the author has personal experience to be able to write it so well. Also she didn’t try to fix the topic of mental health. Didn’t try to make it a big deal. She just showed real life struggles and the importance of relying on your support network. Though towards the end I started thinking, are real life friendships really this good? Have I maybe never had a decent friendship? Or maybe this jaded old lady had forgotten what it’s like to be a teenager (shock, horror!)
Another criticism I often have of contemporary YA is that diversity seems to get added for diversity sakes. In this book I feel like certain characteristics get mentioned, but not in a heavy handed way. Some features are expanded on as it’s important for story development, but others are mentioned in a casual fashion with as much importance as stating how long a characters hair is. Intersectionality is mentioned but not overly analyzed. I actually had to Google what it was, thinking briefly it was Intersex, and I think that this is a brilliant way for a book to bring about change without being obvious about it. It prompted me to expand my own area of understanding and in retrospect I could see how the characters would have been Intersectionalized (is that a word?) and I thank the author for not harping on about it. Their stereotypes aren’t what the story was about, but their diversity is what makes them interesting.
Reading a lot of fantasy YA, it’s often unbelievable that a teenage girl becomes the leader of some group and has to save the world or go to war and do these large epic things. I liked how this story was just about normal teenage coming of age issues. However what other YA tends to do is dumb the characters down, whereas this time I felt the characters complexities were amped up. And rightly so. Teenagers aren’t simple. Finally someone got the mix right and it makes the story so relatable and believable.
Yet another criticism of YA is the dreaded insta-romance. Usually the timeline of a book is much more than a few days, so we follow a relationship over a long time in their world, but in my world is only over 300-400 pages and it makes it feel fake. This book is 4 days over less than 300 pages, so the romance to page ratio is much more believable. You get to experience all those butterfly feelings at the start of a relationship but it doesn’t drag on.
I’m not a massive fan of Australian authors but actually I have a 100% success rate of enjoying all YA books written by Aussie authors. So maybe it’s time I stop being prejudiced against my own country!
Looking forward to discussing this one at book club. For a short book, I sure have had a lot of thoughts. And I can’t wait to share them :-)
Often in contemporary YA books, I feel that Adult authors are clunky when they write about technology and Pop Culture. It’s almost like the publishers give the author a checklist of buzz words they are contracted to mention to make it modern enough to sell. This book didn’t have that. All technology and Pop Culture references felt organic. It was believable when the characters stopped to text or post online. It felt like the author really is a tech user herself and understands the prolific use of technology by teens.
I really enjoyed Taylor as a character. I found her very relatable and her mental health struggles to be eerily accurate. Again, it feels that the author has personal experience to be able to write it so well. Also she didn’t try to fix the topic of mental health. Didn’t try to make it a big deal. She just showed real life struggles and the importance of relying on your support network. Though towards the end I started thinking, are real life friendships really this good? Have I maybe never had a decent friendship? Or maybe this jaded old lady had forgotten what it’s like to be a teenager (shock, horror!)
Another criticism I often have of contemporary YA is that diversity seems to get added for diversity sakes. In this book I feel like certain characteristics get mentioned, but not in a heavy handed way. Some features are expanded on as it’s important for story development, but others are mentioned in a casual fashion with as much importance as stating how long a characters hair is. Intersectionality is mentioned but not overly analyzed. I actually had to Google what it was, thinking briefly it was Intersex, and I think that this is a brilliant way for a book to bring about change without being obvious about it. It prompted me to expand my own area of understanding and in retrospect I could see how the characters would have been Intersectionalized (is that a word?) and I thank the author for not harping on about it. Their stereotypes aren’t what the story was about, but their diversity is what makes them interesting.
Reading a lot of fantasy YA, it’s often unbelievable that a teenage girl becomes the leader of some group and has to save the world or go to war and do these large epic things. I liked how this story was just about normal teenage coming of age issues. However what other YA tends to do is dumb the characters down, whereas this time I felt the characters complexities were amped up. And rightly so. Teenagers aren’t simple. Finally someone got the mix right and it makes the story so relatable and believable.
Yet another criticism of YA is the dreaded insta-romance. Usually the timeline of a book is much more than a few days, so we follow a relationship over a long time in their world, but in my world is only over 300-400 pages and it makes it feel fake. This book is 4 days over less than 300 pages, so the romance to page ratio is much more believable. You get to experience all those butterfly feelings at the start of a relationship but it doesn’t drag on.
I’m not a massive fan of Australian authors but actually I have a 100% success rate of enjoying all YA books written by Aussie authors. So maybe it’s time I stop being prejudiced against my own country!
Looking forward to discussing this one at book club. For a short book, I sure have had a lot of thoughts. And I can’t wait to share them :-)
Queens of Geek takes place over one weekend at a convention called SupaCon following the three best friends Charlie, Taylor and Jamie attending their first convention together.
When I heard about this book I was excited but also a little bit afraid because I love conventions a lot and I wanted this book to do them justice. I'm going to Gamescom in Cologne every year since 2015 and it has become my happy place. It's the only time of the year I can be 100% myself without anyone judging me. I feel totally safe there and I'm looking forward to it the whole year. It was very important to me that this book reflects all the positive feelings I have there and I'm glad to say that it does! It's nerdy, cheesy and the representation is so good.
The story is told alternately from the point of view of the two female main characters: Charlie, a bisexual Chinese-Australian vlogger and actress and Taylor, a plus-size aspiring writer with anxiety and Asperger's syndrome. The two narrators both had clear and easily distinguishable voices, I never had to check who's chapter was who's while reading.
The book tackles lots of topics (anxiety, autism, body shaming, sexism, sexual orientation, unhealthy relationships, dealing with fame) and all of them were handled really well.
My favorite thing about Queen of Geeks was the character Taylor, who's shy and gets easily overwhelmed but at the same time is incredibly funny and sweet. Taylor is human and realistic and easy to love.
The author Jen Wilde mentioned in an interview that she battles with anxiety herself and I think that's evidently in the way Taylor's panic is described. Taylor understands that her anxiety can't be fixed but it can be lived with. She's not overcoming her fears and is suddenly healed, but she knows at the end of the book that she can live with her anxiety and that it's natural to her and manageable.
I removed one star from my rating because some parts in the book were too predictable. I could see the twists coming from a mile away. And for the most part there wasn't really any plot and sadly too little con exploration. I wish we would have seen more from the convention itself. There's so much to see and explore at cons, I think the author missed some great opportunities here. Charlie even spent most of her time outside of the convention!
But even with this criticism I love Queens of Geek because of its diversity and all the positive things I already mentioned in my review (the positive things far outweigh the negative ones). It's just such a feel-good book and definitely the perfect read if you're feeling down.
When I heard about this book I was excited but also a little bit afraid because I love conventions a lot and I wanted this book to do them justice. I'm going to Gamescom in Cologne every year since 2015 and it has become my happy place. It's the only time of the year I can be 100% myself without anyone judging me. I feel totally safe there and I'm looking forward to it the whole year. It was very important to me that this book reflects all the positive feelings I have there and I'm glad to say that it does! It's nerdy, cheesy and the representation is so good.
The story is told alternately from the point of view of the two female main characters: Charlie, a bisexual Chinese-Australian vlogger and actress and Taylor, a plus-size aspiring writer with anxiety and Asperger's syndrome. The two narrators both had clear and easily distinguishable voices, I never had to check who's chapter was who's while reading.
The book tackles lots of topics (anxiety, autism, body shaming, sexism, sexual orientation, unhealthy relationships, dealing with fame) and all of them were handled really well.
My favorite thing about Queen of Geeks was the character Taylor, who's shy and gets easily overwhelmed but at the same time is incredibly funny and sweet. Taylor is human and realistic and easy to love.
The author Jen Wilde mentioned in an interview that she battles with anxiety herself and I think that's evidently in the way Taylor's panic is described. Taylor understands that her anxiety can't be fixed but it can be lived with. She's not overcoming her fears and is suddenly healed, but she knows at the end of the book that she can live with her anxiety and that it's natural to her and manageable.
I removed one star from my rating because some parts in the book were too predictable. I could see the twists coming from a mile away. And for the most part there wasn't really any plot and sadly too little con exploration. I wish we would have seen more from the convention itself. There's so much to see and explore at cons, I think the author missed some great opportunities here. Charlie even spent most of her time outside of the convention!
But even with this criticism I love Queens of Geek because of its diversity and all the positive things I already mentioned in my review (the positive things far outweigh the negative ones). It's just such a feel-good book and definitely the perfect read if you're feeling down.
**I received a free ARC from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.**
4.5 stars
Queens of Geek features three main characters: Charlie, Taylor, and Jamie. Charlie is a breakout actress who is attending SupaCon, a fandom convention, for publicity for her new movie. She is also dealing with drama with her costar after their well publicized breakup due to him cheating on her. Taylor and Jamie go with her as a graduation trip; at SupaCon, Taylor wants to see the author of her favorite series and decides to enter a contest despite her anxiety. At SupaCon, Charlie meets her crush, another famous female vlogger, and Taylor deals with her feelings for Jamie.
The thing I enjoyed most about this book was the diversity: Charlie is a publicly out bisexual Chinese actress, Taylor is on the autistic spectrum, and Jamie is latinx. All of these things are clearly stated; there is no inferring. For example, Charlie speaks about her Chinese heritage many times, like how her parents are immigrants and how she's not ashamed of them. She also talks about how she realized she was bisexual and how, just because she had never really flirted with a girl, her sexuality never changed. One of my favorite scenes was her telling her boyfriend that she was bisexual after he said bisexuality wasn't a real thing:
Despite our society's increasingly progressive attitude, there are still many people who believe that being bisexual is "just a phase" or that once the bi person settles down, they'll switch sexualities. It was really refreshing for Queens of Geek to explicitly state that, even though a bi person is with someone of their opposite gender, they are still bi. After this came one of my favorite scenes in the book:
I honestly almost started cheering when I read this! Taylor, despite her high anxiety (more on this later), stood up for her friend and delivered the perfect response. Heterosexuality is so commonly perceived as the "default" sexuality that people refuse to believe you identify as something else without dating someone of your own gender/in between. Another thing I love is that Charlie meets her crush, Alyssa, and
Anyway, as I mentioned before, Taylor is on the autism spectrum and has high anxiety. Of course, being at an extremely packed convention should be horrible for her, but she stays strong with the help of Jamie and Charlie. She is also plus-sized, which causes more self-consciousness for her, as she doesn't think she is pretty. Both Taylor and Jamie are obsessed with fandom, causing their strong friendship and Protagonists who are plus-sized, on the autism spectrum, or have anxiety are exceedingly rare, but here Jen Wilde gives us all of these in one character. And not only this, but she also gets a romance!
Although the book deals with fandom issues and the like (which I don't care for because it reminds me of my own superwholock days), I think Queens of Geek dealt with all of the healthy aspects, like how Taylor uses her love for fandom as a safe space for when she gets too overwhelmed. Fandoms can be highly toxic nowadays, but this book portrays the good side of it, the side of it that I was attracted to so long ago.
Queens of Geek was a fun, cute read with so much diversity! Bi Chinese character and a wlw relationship, and a plus-sized, autistic character who has a romance too! I enjoyed this book so much, and I hope all of you read it, especially because it has so many things we need to see in the world today.
4.5 stars
Queens of Geek features three main characters: Charlie, Taylor, and Jamie. Charlie is a breakout actress who is attending SupaCon, a fandom convention, for publicity for her new movie. She is also dealing with drama with her costar after their well publicized breakup due to him cheating on her. Taylor and Jamie go with her as a graduation trip; at SupaCon, Taylor wants to see the author of her favorite series and decides to enter a contest despite her anxiety. At SupaCon, Charlie meets her crush, another famous female vlogger, and Taylor deals with her feelings for Jamie.
The thing I enjoyed most about this book was the diversity: Charlie is a publicly out bisexual Chinese actress, Taylor is on the autistic spectrum, and Jamie is latinx. All of these things are clearly stated; there is no inferring. For example, Charlie speaks about her Chinese heritage many times, like how her parents are immigrants and how she's not ashamed of them. She also talks about how she realized she was bisexual and how, just because she had never really flirted with a girl, her sexuality never changed. One of my favorite scenes was her telling her boyfriend that she was bisexual after he said bisexuality wasn't a real thing:
"What do you mean you don't believe in bisexuals? They're not mythical creatures," I [Taylor] said. "They're real people, just like you."
He squirmed uncomfortably, and Charlie sighed. "Reese, I'm bisexual. Do you believe in me?"
He sat up and stared at her like he was suddenly seeing a whole different person. "You? But you're with me."
"So? I'm still bi."
Despite our society's increasingly progressive attitude, there are still many people who believe that being bisexual is "just a phase" or that once the bi person settles down, they'll switch sexualities. It was really refreshing for Queens of Geek to explicitly state that, even though a bi person is with someone of their opposite gender, they are still bi. After this came one of my favorite scenes in the book:
When Reese finally said something, I wished he hadn't. "But how could you possibly know you're bi? Have you ever been with a girl?"
I remember seeing frustration written all over Charlie's face, and I spoke up. "How did you know you were straight before you were with a girl, Reese?"
I honestly almost started cheering when I read this! Taylor, despite her high anxiety (more on this later), stood up for her friend and delivered the perfect response. Heterosexuality is so commonly perceived as the "default" sexuality that people refuse to believe you identify as something else without dating someone of your own gender/in between. Another thing I love is that Charlie meets her crush, Alyssa, and
Spoiler
dates her.Anyway, as I mentioned before, Taylor is on the autism spectrum and has high anxiety. Of course, being at an extremely packed convention should be horrible for her, but she stays strong with the help of Jamie and Charlie. She is also plus-sized, which causes more self-consciousness for her, as she doesn't think she is pretty. Both Taylor and Jamie are obsessed with fandom, causing their strong friendship and
Spoiler
later relationship.Although the book deals with fandom issues and the like (which I don't care for because it reminds me of my own superwholock days), I think Queens of Geek dealt with all of the healthy aspects, like how Taylor uses her love for fandom as a safe space for when she gets too overwhelmed. Fandoms can be highly toxic nowadays, but this book portrays the good side of it, the side of it that I was attracted to so long ago.
Queens of Geek was a fun, cute read with so much diversity! Bi Chinese character and a wlw relationship, and a plus-sized, autistic character who has a romance too! I enjoyed this book so much, and I hope all of you read it, especially because it has so many things we need to see in the world today.
4.5 stars
I don't read a lot of Ya Contemporary it's just not usually up my alley, but this grabbed me. It had so many aspects that i love in a story and a book set at a con? How could i resist. This book was wonderful and refreshing, a needed break after Daughter of the Blood. I kind of feel like this is me in a book and it represented every aspect of my life and i loved every bloody minute of it.
I don't read a lot of Ya Contemporary it's just not usually up my alley, but this grabbed me. It had so many aspects that i love in a story and a book set at a con? How could i resist. This book was wonderful and refreshing, a needed break after Daughter of the Blood. I kind of feel like this is me in a book and it represented every aspect of my life and i loved every bloody minute of it.
THIS WAS SO GREAT. Also the perfect book to read during Vidcon!
great rep, fluffy, overall my heart is so warm
I hovered pretty hard between giving this 2 stars and bumping it up to 3. I'm giving it 3 stars for nerd cred alone, but I think I have a lot to say...
First, I should probably start by saying this book does something that I have already acknowledged (if not in my reviews, then in my own mind) does NOT work for me: "Fake" nerdy things that are supposed to be "real" nerdy things. For example: The con that Jamie, Taylor, and Charlie are at in Queens of Geek is SupaCon. Not Comic Con. The person/character Taylor is obsessed with? Not a real person. Which is all well and good, and I'm sure there are copyright things involved that prevent authors from just saying Comic Con or whatever. But let's be real -- SupaCon sounds kind of stupid. Maybe Comic Con does too, but it's real and so I know what it is, and I'd rather just have it be acknowledged that that's where they are than some made up Con that is supposed to be the one we know.
Okay, that was a long rant. And maybe still isn't clear. Just for comparison, I love Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell. My least favorite part of that book? The fanfic parts. Not because I don't appreciate fanfic (I do. I've both read and written it), but because it was essentially Harry Potter fanfic that couldn't be called Harry Potter fanfic. Which is also why I will most likely never read Carry On. The whole point of geeking out about something is how much you love it -- while I understand the sentiment of a "fake" thing that the characters love, it just is not usually a successful draw for me as a reader.
Okay so that's out of the way. How about the story itself? Eh... I liked Charlie. I will say that. I thought she was pretty kick ass, and even though she was clearly figuring things out, I enjoyed reading her story. She had the bonus of being there as one of the "stars," so it was cool going behind the scenes with her. She was also just a cool character.
Taylor, on the other hand, I found problematic. I was on board with her at first when she started talking about her anxiety -- I have people I'm very close to that suffer from anxiety, in different ways and to different extents. So a character suffering from anxiety? Sure, I get that. However...almost halfway into the book, we also learn that she is autistic? If that's the case, why is the reader not clued into this fact sooner? Why does it feel like a throwaway thing to learn, but also then suddenly immensely important? It is also never explained how her autism differs from her anxiety. There's a comment or two about how, when she's writing or putting her cosplay together she gets so into it that she completely loses track of the time, and doesn't hear people calling her name. That doesn't really feel that unusual to me, honestly. Haven't we all been there at one point or another, so engrossed in an activity that we kind of forgot the world around us existed?
Here's my other gripe...while I admire any author's attempt to write diverse, inclusive books, this one felt like it cheapened a lot of the diversity that was present. It was almost like the author had a diversity checklist: Characters that are minorities? Check. Bisexual character? Check. Anxiety disorder? Check. Autism? Check. But...throwing these things in there didn't really enhance the story or the characters in anyway. Knowing Charlie was Asian didn't really have any affect on the story, aside from a reference to her favorite home made meal. You'd never even know Jamie was of hispanic descent if not for a hispanic-sounding last name and a reference to his abuela. To me, truly diverse stories are about people whose backgrounds are critical to who they are, and are an integral part of the story without being in-your-face. The most recent (and best) example I can think of is The Hate U Give . In that story, I felt immersed in a community and culture that was very different from my own and who those people were and how they grew up was just a part of the story. It was entwined in every fiber of that story, because it was who those people were. It was not as ingrained in the characters in Queens of Geek.
I will say the one area that I didn't have a gripe with was, again, how Charlie's storyline was handled, and the way her bisexuality played a role in the story and her journey. I did think that was handled well, and I truly enjoyed Charlie, and her unfolding relationship with Alyssa. I also liked the romance between Taylor and Jamie, though it felt slightly less genuine? Maybe because Taylor is in such denial about her feelings for him, and his for her. When they do get together, it feels sudden. It's exciting, but handled unevenly from that point on. It also would have been nice to get some chapters from Jamie's POV -- the 3 friends are so close, it's kind of strange not to get his perspective.
I feel like I've been kind of harsh in this review. I think I just expected so much more from it, because I am a nerd, and all about fandoms and cons and all that stuff. I wanted this book to be great and had very high expectations, but it just never reached them. Luckily the book was a quick read -- if it hadn't been, I think it would have ended up as a DNF on my shelf.
First, I should probably start by saying this book does something that I have already acknowledged (if not in my reviews, then in my own mind) does NOT work for me: "Fake" nerdy things that are supposed to be "real" nerdy things. For example: The con that Jamie, Taylor, and Charlie are at in Queens of Geek is SupaCon. Not Comic Con. The person/character Taylor is obsessed with? Not a real person. Which is all well and good, and I'm sure there are copyright things involved that prevent authors from just saying Comic Con or whatever. But let's be real -- SupaCon sounds kind of stupid. Maybe Comic Con does too, but it's real and so I know what it is, and I'd rather just have it be acknowledged that that's where they are than some made up Con that is supposed to be the one we know.
Okay, that was a long rant. And maybe still isn't clear. Just for comparison, I love Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell. My least favorite part of that book? The fanfic parts. Not because I don't appreciate fanfic (I do. I've both read and written it), but because it was essentially Harry Potter fanfic that couldn't be called Harry Potter fanfic. Which is also why I will most likely never read Carry On. The whole point of geeking out about something is how much you love it -- while I understand the sentiment of a "fake" thing that the characters love, it just is not usually a successful draw for me as a reader.
Okay so that's out of the way. How about the story itself? Eh... I liked Charlie. I will say that. I thought she was pretty kick ass, and even though she was clearly figuring things out, I enjoyed reading her story. She had the bonus of being there as one of the "stars," so it was cool going behind the scenes with her. She was also just a cool character.
Taylor, on the other hand, I found problematic. I was on board with her at first when she started talking about her anxiety -- I have people I'm very close to that suffer from anxiety, in different ways and to different extents. So a character suffering from anxiety? Sure, I get that. However...almost halfway into the book, we also learn that she is autistic? If that's the case, why is the reader not clued into this fact sooner? Why does it feel like a throwaway thing to learn, but also then suddenly immensely important? It is also never explained how her autism differs from her anxiety. There's a comment or two about how, when she's writing or putting her cosplay together she gets so into it that she completely loses track of the time, and doesn't hear people calling her name. That doesn't really feel that unusual to me, honestly. Haven't we all been there at one point or another, so engrossed in an activity that we kind of forgot the world around us existed?
Here's my other gripe...while I admire any author's attempt to write diverse, inclusive books, this one felt like it cheapened a lot of the diversity that was present. It was almost like the author had a diversity checklist: Characters that are minorities? Check. Bisexual character? Check. Anxiety disorder? Check. Autism? Check. But...throwing these things in there didn't really enhance the story or the characters in anyway. Knowing Charlie was Asian didn't really have any affect on the story, aside from a reference to her favorite home made meal. You'd never even know Jamie was of hispanic descent if not for a hispanic-sounding last name and a reference to his abuela. To me, truly diverse stories are about people whose backgrounds are critical to who they are, and are an integral part of the story without being in-your-face. The most recent (and best) example I can think of is The Hate U Give . In that story, I felt immersed in a community and culture that was very different from my own and who those people were and how they grew up was just a part of the story. It was entwined in every fiber of that story, because it was who those people were. It was not as ingrained in the characters in Queens of Geek.
I will say the one area that I didn't have a gripe with was, again, how Charlie's storyline was handled, and the way her bisexuality played a role in the story and her journey. I did think that was handled well, and I truly enjoyed Charlie, and her unfolding relationship with Alyssa. I also liked the romance between Taylor and Jamie, though it felt slightly less genuine? Maybe because Taylor is in such denial about her feelings for him, and his for her. When they do get together, it feels sudden. It's exciting, but handled unevenly from that point on. It also would have been nice to get some chapters from Jamie's POV -- the 3 friends are so close, it's kind of strange not to get his perspective.
I feel like I've been kind of harsh in this review. I think I just expected so much more from it, because I am a nerd, and all about fandoms and cons and all that stuff. I wanted this book to be great and had very high expectations, but it just never reached them. Luckily the book was a quick read -- if it hadn't been, I think it would have ended up as a DNF on my shelf.
This book was relatable, funny, understanding, smart, and a beautiful look into nerd culture and friendships. It examines how a book can change your life, how believing in yourself can be your biggest battle but the most important one, and the fact that you can't let your fears stop you from trying. I think this was a powerful story with strong characters that you will fall in love with.
#WNDB #LQGTQIA #AnxietyDisorder # Autism #Aspergers #Multicultural #BodyPositivity
#WNDB #LQGTQIA #AnxietyDisorder # Autism #Aspergers #Multicultural #BodyPositivity