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Search tags: Lee-Harmon
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review 2020-02-10 01:18
Kindle Freebie
The Snake Who Wanted To Be A Horse (WantsToBe) - Valerie Harmon,Carol Stevens
I am conflicted about this book. On one hand, the artwork is great. In general, the story is a good one about problem solving.

However, the ending. Look, I get that it is important to teach people to go by than appearances and to reach for what you want. The thing is that the ending to this book, where a snake does in fact become a horse is, quite frankly, a fail. It comes to close to the idea of "if you are not perfect, just get the work done" theme/idea that appears in so many things. And it is disquieting. To be fair, I doubt the author means for the story to be taken that way, but it feels that way. Don't worry if you are not "x" because there is a way to become "x". Normally, that's fine but when the snake just magically becomes a horse, it smacks of third party help or the idea that if you don't change, you don't want it badly enough (ie. According to the logic of the story, if a person was missing a hand and worked really hard at pretending they had two hands, a new hand would happen) and that is a bit dangerous.
 
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review 2019-06-14 01:41
DNF: The Last Exit To Normal
The Last Exit to Normal - Michael Harmon

It's been a really long time since I've either given up on a book or disliked it so much that I couldn't even hate-read it through to the end.

 

Ben is the protagonist who's father came home one day and announced he was gay.  Mom walked out--which just effed up.  Ben, having had his world fall apart, goes full-on delinquent, alcohol, drugs, general terrible behavior.  After a while dad forced them into therapy, they have some breakthroughs.  Things get a lot better, not perfect, but better.  Ben cleans up his act and has even gotten used to his stepdad, whom he calls momdad, even if he doesn't love the situation.  He has one slip-up and they decided it's a good idea to move a teenaged city boy to the middle of nowhere Montana.

 

So we're talking two gay men moving back to one's hometown--the town he moved away from for very good reason, and they bring their son/stepson with them.  They move into his childhood home with his mother, who doesn't like that her son his gay, but he's still her son, so there's that.

 

Bonnie Mae, or Miss Mae, is old school country, respect is demanded, manners are insisted upon, no cussing or sarcasm, beatings and/or starvation as punishment.  Yeah great idea for a smart-assed teenager with two dads.

 

This books is just a mess.  Verbal threats, physical abuse, starvation, and forcing Ben to sleep in the woodshed.  And this is all from Miss Mae.  And dad just sits back and lets this woman do this to his child.  Like, what?!  I don't care what lame excuse you want to use, "they do things different," "she's from a different time," "we're guests in her home."  I'll be damned if I let someone lay a hand on my child.  You'd best not even discipline my child, especially if I'm close enough to be called to handle a situation.

 

Miss Mae is an asshole.  Dad is an asshole.  Ben is an asshole.  The only one who's decent is Edward, who willingly came back to the town that tortured him throughout his childhood, just to help his partner's child stay on the straight and narrow.  The neighbor is also an abusive, homophobic asshole, who beats the living daylights out of his son because Ben was talking to him, even after the boy told Ben to leave him alone, even after Ben told the man that he had approached the boy who didn't want to talk to him.  

 

I didn't think I would finish it because I didn't even care if there was character growth or a redemption arc.  But I toyed with the idea of slogging through it anyway.  And then the little neighbor boy shot a stray cat just because.  That's it.  Just. Because.

 

I "noped" out of that book and cannot recommend anyone to read it.

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text 2019-06-12 13:51
Reading progress update: I've read 86 out of 288 pages.
The Last Exit to Normal - Michael Harmon

I hate this book.  Pretty sure this is going to be a DNF.

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text 2019-06-11 19:26
Reading progress update: I've read 39 out of 288 pages.
The Last Exit to Normal - Michael Harmon

This might be a DNF. They've moved the kid to the middle of nowhere Montana against his will--which sure he's a 17-year-old and when parents decided to move that's just that.  But we're dealing homophobes and abusive behaviours.  Ben, the teenage protagonist is being hit and now starved and thrown out but the mother of his "stepdad" and his father is just, "Cool."

 

I get that things are done 'differently' there, and she's from a different time or whatever lame excuse you want to put on it--even the, "We're a guest in her home," excuse, but I'll be damned if I allow ANYONE to lay a hand on my kid I don't care if it's your house or how "disrespectful" you believe them to be. Just no!  I may try to finish the chapter, but the kid has been hit, denied dinner and kicked out of the house to stay in the woodshed until she decides he can come back inside and dad is just going with it.  This is a mess.  Normally I'd keep reading with a sick fascination wonder just how hot-messy it can get, but this is just...nah.

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text 2019-06-11 18:24
Reading progress update: I've read 1 out of 288 pages.
The Last Exit to Normal - Michael Harmon

OMG YOU HAVE GOT TO BE KIDDING ME!!! Again with the first person point of view.  This makes six of the last eight books I've read now. Insanity or a sign?  Who knows.

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