How Trans Kids Are Surviving Hate and Finding Joy in a Turbulent Era
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From an award-winning journalist comes a vivid and moving portrait of eight trans and nonbinary teenagers across the country, following their daily triumphs, struggles, and all that encompasses growing up trans in America today "A master class in journalism as a force for change. Nico Lang cuts through the political ping-pong over transgender rights to surface the human stories that too often go ignored. Lang's lucid and clear-eyed account of their lives offers an essential corrective, reminding us that there's nothing more American than the freedom to be yourself." --SAMANTHA ALLEN, author of Real Queer America "Lang weaves this broad bleak terrain with warm insights and a clear immediacy of message. Expansive and compassionate." ―GABE DUNN, New York Times bestselling author of I Hate Everyone But You Media coverage tends to sensationalize the fight over how trans kids should be allowed to live, but what is incredibly rare are the voices of the people at the heart of this debate: transgender and gender nonconforming kids themselves. For their groundbreaking new book, journalist Nico Lang spent a year traveling the country to document the lives of transgender, nonbinary, and genderfluid teens and their families. Drawing on hundreds of hours of on-the-ground interviews with them and the people in their communities, American Teenager paints a vivid portrait of what it's actually like to grow up trans today. From the tip of Florida's conservative panhandle to vibrant queer communities in California, and from Texas churches to mosques in Illinois, American Teenager gives readers a window into the lives of Wyatt, Rhydian, Mykah, Clint, Ruby, Augie, Jack, and Kylie, eight teens who, despite what some lawmakers might want us to believe, are truly just kids looking for a brighter future.
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Thank you to Shelf Awareness Pro and Abrams Books for the free ARC.
This slice-of-life book was both easy and hard to read. No individual chapter took long for me to get through, but some chapters really troubled me and made me re-read them before moving forward.
For readers who already recognize the humanity of trans youth, I find this useful for expanding sensitivity to a broader spectrum of trans kids. Not a masculine/feminine spectrum, but rather the kids stress-puking at every legislative cycle and those who really don't care that they're trans. I had ideas of how to support trans kids somewhere between those two positions and I feel slightly better equipped if I work with any of the more extreme ends.
For any reader who's coming in with another perspective, I fear that the realistic writing and the “just like other kids” thesis might reinforce the notion that gender nonconformity is just a phase. Teenagers do a lot of poorly-thought-out things, as evidenced within this book by many of the interactions with friends, family, schoolwork, etc. This book would not convince anyone that teenagers have the wisdom to determine their own gender identity. That's probably not the goal, it's just something that struck me.