3.5 stars rounded up. "Be gay, do crimes," substance abuse and mental breakdowns are romanticized in queer culture, but it doesn't always make them interesting to read about. Those were, however, the vibes of the book.
Make Sure You Die Screaming was a short, frenetic read following a wild trip (literally, they're both drug-addled drunks) as the unnamed newly out genderfluid, pansexual (I think, it was never explicitly stated, but I really wish people would say bisexual or pansexual in the text instead of making us guess, an irritation from this bisexual, but I digress) narrator escapes Chicago in their abusive ex-boyfriend's stolen car to travel to Arkansas with their young friend who's hiding secrets to find their missing, estranged father. Along the way, the unnamed narrator is grieving their dead best friend from their fancy corporate advertising job that they quit/were fired from in a violent outburst.
Despite these dark themes and the relentless pace, this book also was quite cozy with low stakes and not much happened. It almost reminded me of a sitcom with the prose and interiority of a literary novel. I found myself getting bored at times because I don't glorify glitterpunk addicts who do crime as a side hustle. But the narrator is a morally gray anti-hero on a quest for radical honesty who is nevertheless a good person despite their fuckups and glorified rudeness, so that made them interesting.
I also appreciated seeing the representation of an AMAB nonbinary person coming to a gender awakening as they're tearing themselves out of the gender binary after being forced to include their pronouns in their email signature at work and getting confused, thus setting off their current exploration. I've only ever read AFAB nonbinary characters and sometimes I think people have the misconception that being nonbinary is just woman lite. It's not. (like that annoying allegedly inclusive phrase "women and nonbinary people"...)
This reminded me quite a bit of the dark, weird absurdity of Chuck Palahniuk or Melissa Broder, particularly her work Death Valley. It just kept getting weirder and weirder as the unnamed narrator lost their mind in the weirdness of rural Arkansas. It was kind of shallow in exploring the ways that intelligent people who vote for Democratic candidates become radicalized into far-right ideologies, treating them like parodies in a way, but appropriate for what this novel was trying to do. It wasn't trying to philosophize the narrator's break from their dad or their dad's break from mainstream society, they were just along for this crazy ride.
In the end not much really changed but that's also life too. It ended on a sort of hopeful note but I wasn't sure if the narrator would be okay, figure out their gender or wanted to sober up, but this was a slice of life into their zany mental breakdown. I do hope they'll be okay, because they seemed like a good person who made some terrible choices.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for the advance review copy. I am leaving this review voluntarily.