Hello, can I interest you in some pain and queer rage? (ft. autistic and trans rep as well as religious cults and commentary on systemic oppression)
...Mom said I would be venerated as a true instrument of God’s will, just as holy as the cherubim, thrones, dominions, and virtues. Dad begged me to tamp it down, to be quiet, to be better than what the Angels had done to me. Theo told me my power would be as terrifying as the Devil and twice as righteous.
I will be good. I will make them suffer. And I will take the Angel’s created weapon and turn it against them.
But I’m still terrified.
Thank you to the publisher for sending me an ARC in exchange for an honest review!
A mind-blowing debut filled with enriching prose, incredible commentary, and unhinged fury.
Set in a world not unlike our own, most of humanity has been wiped out by a virus called the Flood. And with the rise of this pandemic came an eco-fascist Evangelical terrorist cult known as the Angels. These Angels believe that this virus is the wrath of God, meant to cleanse the Earth of humanity so that the believers may be saved and the world can be restored from sin. And they have made Benji, our MC, their weapon in bringing about this divine retribution. So Benji - a queer, trans, teenage boy - runs from this cult to find himself among a LGBTQ+ youth shelter that is fighting back, for their future.
White draws incredibly profound parallels to our present reality, especially in relation to the effects of our own pandemic on our everyday lives, both on a large and small scale. The systemic struggles of this apocalyptic world are eerily familiar to that of our own, and are able to cut to the core of some of our major societal issues. This book points a finger at the upper classes who hoard resources while asking marginalized individuals to risk their lives on the front lines. And how these exact privileged individuals refuse to take the smallest of actions (like pulling their masks over their nose) to protect them in return, despite refusing to share the accessibility to health and safety resources. But even more than that, it unleashes fire and fury on the elite, those that put the systems of oppression in place and those that uphold them.
This book discusses the difference between religion as an imperialistic, oppressive tool and an individual source of faith. It shows the way that religious institutions weaponize their ideology to frighten people into obedience. Throughout the book, we see the main character struggle with his own belief systems and the way he’s been force fed an oppressive perspective his whole life. My favorite way this is done is through Benji’s constant attempts to define the word “good.” All he knows is that he wants to be good, and he spends the book trying to put together what that word means to him, by examining the way that the people and systems around him define it. It’s such a wonderful touchstone for us as an audience as Benji’s belief systems and perspective changes throughout his journey.
This book exists so that queer kids know that they are worthy of love from themselves and from others without condition. That absolutely NOTHING is required of them in order to deserve love and support. And that those who tell them otherwise will bring their suffering upon themselves, crumpling under the weight of their own hatred and negativity. And if they don’t, give ‘em Hell.
CW: religious bigotry/cults, transphobia (deadnaming, misgendering, forced detransition), body horror/gore/blood (graphic), decapitation, tooth horror (p. 33, 166-168, 255), eyeball horror (p. 377), dead bodies (graphic), violence/gun violence (graphic), death, child death, misogyny, abusive relationship, fire, death of father (offscreen), grief, emesis (graphic), pandemic, dysphoria, hallucinations, medical content, racism (minor), homophobia (minor), ableism (minor), claustrophobia (brief), sexual content between minors (brief, offscreen), underage drinking