Date Me tells the stories of my crazy family; the unique and often lousy ways people interact with me because of my disability; and my attempts, often failed, at dating in a wheelchair with a strained, but ongoing determination not to give up.
This collection of autobiographical strips has some appalling examples of how awful and casually cruel people can be to individuals in wheelchairs. Unfortunately though, the book mostly consists of unfunny, repetitive and confusing gags about fathers, dating, dogs and other slice of life sort of things.
This was really quick and easy to read. It had some cute moments and some valuable lessons about physical disability, but it was a bit too repetitive and lacking in punchlines for my taste.
Kristin is in a wheelchair due to a jet ski accident. This is a book about how that has affected her life and her relationships. It is just a collection of comics about her daily life and her dating adventures.
Honestly, I didn't enjoy this very much. It didn't have a whole lot of humor (there were a couple comics that made me chuckle, but they were few and far between). The dialogue is formatted very strangely so it makes it difficult to figure out which dialogue is supposed to come first in any given panel. I don't mind the simplistic art style too much, but I do wish that recurring characters were a bit more differentiated from temporary ones. It gets confusing trying to figure out who is who. This was really just a slow, confusing read.
Date Me is a collection of comics that tells stories of dating in a wheelchair, social situations sculpted by people’s response to a wheelchair, and the struggle of trying to fit in from a different perspective.
Each page is a 6-panel comic of mostly her experience with first dates. It definitely made me realize how insensitive some folks are, and how few places have wheelchair accessibility. There were times her date would carry her up the stairs, then she was stuck in a place with no way out. I’m also thankful I never had to experience online dating.
The art was very simplistic and at times the dialogue felt repetitive, but there are a lot of lessons an able-bodied person can learn from her experience. I really enjoyed her perspective.
I'm not sure how to rate this, so leaving the stars blank. This is a collection of almost-stick figure drawings (see cover) in six-panel comics. It is slice-of-life about Beale's life, with many comics being about going on dates (online dating, first dates, dates reacting to her wheelchair, dates (or friends) reacting to veganism, (lack of) accessibility of date locations. I found some humor in the repetition of some strips, and it was nice to have a mix of family and friend strips (not ALL dates).
This was quite something...there was so much repetition that I began to think that I was accidentally re-reading some pages! I suppose this book can give some perspective on what it would be like to live life in a wheelchair and how that may affect your possibilities of dating but over all there wasn’t much to this book. 😅
She thinks she's far more entertaining than she is. Her dad seems really interesting, and the honest experiences of dating in a wheelchair are interesting for those of us not in wheelchairs to learn.
I found this title on the "new" shelf at the Central library in downtown Portland, OR. While the art is nothing to get excited about, Beale's book is amusing.
I got about a quarter into this and it just felt super repetitive. It something that I would read in random stray comic strip format, but can’t do as a full collection.
This book was good when it focused on the disability stuff, but it got a bit repetitive. I also didn’t get a lot of the jokes; some stuff needed explaining and didn’t get it.
Our book club read this book and loved it! How creative to illustrate the experience of dating in a wheelchair! This is hilarious at times and yet, at the same time, a bittersweet reminder of how terrible people can be of understanding how to treat humans who are differently-abled. Kristin’s strength, humor, and positive spirit shine through every page of this book.