I wanted to like this book more because I want there to be more FTM literature around for people who need to see themselves represented. And there's nothing incorrect or inauthentic about the book--it seems like a fine representation of how one person's transition can go. But the writing itself felt a little soulless, I guess--there wasn't much to the book besides the facts of what Finn was doing, and just honestly not much feeling. Everything is just sort of going through the motions, and most of the characters we see sort of pop in to present one of the typical reactions FAAB people often get when they transition. Someone exists to say transphobic things. Someone exists to wail about losing their "daughter." Someone exists to resist his transition because being known as a group of girls is disrupted by his transition. There were a few aspects of his life that weren't specifically about his relatively typical journey through partial medical transition, which was good (a few things about his band, a few things about his grandmother), but those were pretty divorced from emotion as well. It's like people are saying and doing the things that I know should matter and should be emotional, but I just had no connection to anything that was happening.
I didn't learn anything new about the experience of being FTM (though that's subjective; if this was your first book on the topic, I imagine some of it would be eye-opening), and there was very little that felt unique (though I'd never seen a story with an intersex great-uncle in it--a character who partially inspired some family members to accept Finn's new gender presentation because they'd known how frustrating and disappointing it had been for Albert to have been raised as Alberta). So much of it was just very . . . declarative. Instead of watching Finn experience dysphoria, it was more like "Finn mentions not liking having breasts. Finn experiments with binding. Finn isn't satisfied with how it looks but does it anyway. Finn points out that he feels dysphoria from that. Next." We're frequently told Finn was anxious, Finn felt bad, Finn was preoccupied, Finn was angry. Most of it you just have to take his word for it. You can't really feel it in the story. There's a scene where he decides to call himself Finn instead of using his birth name (Skye), and it's basically like "I said my name was Finn, that was a name I always liked." Nothing else to it. And that's then his name forever. (More thought was put into the middle name, but the eventual decision felt a little cheesy.)
I WAS a little more caught up in it by the end of the story, so I do think it got better as Finn went further on his journey, but for the most part it was just "then Finn had to get a counselor, and then he went to the counselor, and then they talked about this, and then he had to do this, and then he had this problem, and then he met some other FTMs and some were cool and some were not, and then he had to come out to his family and Dad acted like this while Mom acted like this, and then. . . . " More like a roadmap to a life without much actual life JUICE in it.
Short overall assessment: I like that this book was written but I did not like how it was written. I can't really think of a memorable part or a part I liked. There were a few things I was glad not to see, like it was cool that they didn't include the trope where the trans person gets beat up or something. (That's more likely to happen to trans women, though.) I kind of want to give this book two stars because I just didn't have a good time reading it, but I'm giving it three because with a book like this it's so easy to go REALLY wrong, and my disappointment is mostly surrounding what it wasn't rather than what it was.