While many of the familial dynamics in this book are messy and unhealthy, Osunde’s occasional shifts to the parental viewpoint allow a more complex and humane picture to emerge. We see how care is mixed with shame and repressed desire ... Osunde is brilliant at character, giving the cast rich, knotty backstories that unfold in bursts of revelation. This novel is notable less for its plot—there isn’t much—than for these moments of epiphany. It is bracing to encounter queer people reckoning so candidly with insecurities unique to their experience ... The focus on the characters’ sexual identities can, however, feel totalizing, allowing for little in the way of development that does not centre in some way on their queerness.
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