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200 pages, Paperback
First published June 5, 2018
... a tiny voice in my head quietly pointed out that I loved him. Not a “he’s my brother and I love him” kinda love. No, this was something different. This was a “I think I’ve fallen in love with Matt” kinda love.For family and friends, their relationship is a foregone conclusion: "... we weren’t confronted with exclamations of surprise or shock, but joy, sheer joy that we’d finally gotten onto the same page." There is no on-page sex in the book, and the ending is very low-key as Matty and David continue their lives together, with the added layer of their loving relationship.
My mom wouldn’t mind if you came to the house. She’d probably be really happy about it, come to think of it.”Second, we never really get a good sense of what any characters looks like, what their voices sound like, their mannerisms, the full range of their interests and abilities, etc. There is little in-depth character development, with a heavy emphasis on "tell" not "show." At the end of the book, these characters do not live in my heart because I don't really know them.
“Why’s that?”
I waved a hand in the air. “Oh, she’s always asking why I never bring friends home from school, or why I never hang out with them.” I grinned. “I can’t really tell her most of the kids in my class would be happy talking about playing in the sand pit.”
I was starting to think that I wasn’t cut out for sexual adventures. [...] I’m not even sure what I thought she should make me feel. I just knew it wasn’t there.Yet after he and Matt finally realize they are in love, David ponders how his coworkers will think Oh wow. He’s bi? Wait, what? David reads as perhaps demi-sexual, but definitely not bisexual, in my opinion.