Patrick's Basement is a warm and sincere PG-13 coming-of-age / coming out story, and I sincerely hope that it will reach the audience of kids going through similarly challenging experiences. It's not a promise that everything will be okay, but more of a reassurance that you're not alone, and that there are many good times along with the bad ones, and that you CAN survive it and even find happiness along the way.
It can take years for a writer to find a voice that is truly their own, but PJ Appleton's personality is abundantly present in every page in this story of a painfully self-aware high school student trying to come to terms with himself while maneuvering through a life thick with traps and pitfalls. Although the story takes place in the late 1980s, I think it will resonate with a lot of young people today (and I say this as someone with a decade and a half worth of experience teaching high school students).
The writing is a bit raw, but not in a way that will distract most readers, and there's an extent to which that suits the narrator's tone and point of view. More importantly, the novel moves at a good pace with plenty of humor and an admirable amount of insight into how people think and act. It's a very good book, especially as a debut effort, and I hope it finds the audience who will benefit from it, whether it's the kids going through similar struggles or the people trying to understand what those kids are dealing with. It's a book with plenty to teach its readers, but don't worry, it's also exceptionally entertaining and engaging.