Vanilla
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- $7.99
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
A bold, groundbreaking novel about coming out, coming into your own, and coming apart.Vanilla and Hunter have been dating since seventh grade. They came out together, navigated middle school together, and became that couple in high school that everyone always sees as a couple. There are complications and confusions, for sure. But most of all, they love each other.As high school goes, though, and as their relationship deepens, some cracks begin to show. Hunter thinks they should be having sex.Vanilla isn't so sure. Hunter doesn't mind hanging out with loud, obnoxious friends.Vanilla would rather avoid them. If they're becoming different people, can they be the same couple?Falling in love is hard.Staying in love is harder.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Boyfriends Hunter and Vanilla have known, and loved, each other for years, but their relationship is showing stress fractures in high school: Hunter is ready (beyond ready) to have sex, and Vanilla is very much not. Writing in free verse, first-time novelist Merrell (coauthor of The Full Spectrum) alternates between the boys' voices, painting their longings and differing views in sharp relief. "I knew this would happen/ eventually," Vanilla acknowledges. "One of us him specifically / would change/ and we'd both know why / specifically me." Additional pressure comes in the form of "the Gang," a group of out, sex-focused guys at school; Merrell incorporates poems from their ringleader, genderfluid Clown, as Vanilla and Hunter's relationship becomes further strained. "At least Clown/ sees me as sexual,/ can imagine me/ on top of someone," thinks Hunter. Keeping track of who's narrating takes some work once three voices get involved (the speakers aren't labeled, though the fonts are differentiated), but it's well worth it as Merrell poignantly shows these queer teens reckoning with individual fears and desires, as well as powerful external pressures. Ages 14 up.
Customer Reviews
Glad I read this!
I am very glad I read this book. I love the representation this book gives to many identities/sexualities, a light is being shed on communities that haven’t gotten much recognition before. The only reason why I rated 4/5 is because I feel that although the poems were beyond great, I felt the main characters voices were lost in the poetic nature of the book. Don’t get me wrong, I love the characters, I just wish I could hear them more. Some said that this book was “aphobic” but in all honesty in the beginning some of the characters were being aphobic due to not understanding what asexuality was. In the end, when there was more understanding everyone became more sensitive and informed on other genders and sexualities besides gay straight and cisgender. I loved it because it showed a struggle between 2 boys who have loved each other since the 7th grade. It shows confusion with coming to terms with who you are, and it helps define what love truly means. we