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Green Glass Ghosts

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

At age nineteen, the queer narrator of Green Glass Ghosts steps off a bus in downtown Vancouver, a city where the faceless condo towers of the wealthy loom over the streets to the east where folks are just trying to get by, against the deceptively beautiful backdrop of snow-capped mountains and sparkling ocean. It's the year 2000, and the world is still mostly analogue—pagers are the best way to get ahold of someone and resumés are printed out on paper and dropped off in person, and what's this new fad called webmail?

Our hopeful hero arrives on the West Coast on the cusp of adulthood, fleeing a traumatic childhood in an unsafe family plagued by religious extremism, mental health crises, and abuse in a conservative town not known for accepting difference. They're eager to build a new life among like-minded folks, and before they know it, they've got a job, an apartment, and a relationship, dancing, busking, and making out in bars, parks, art spaces, and apartments across the city. But their search for belonging and stability is buried in drinking, jealousy, and painful memories of the past, distracting the protagonist from their ultimate goal of playing live music and spurring them to an emotional crisis. If they can't learn to care for themselves, how will they ever find true connection and community?

With haunting illustrations by Gem Hall that conjure the moody, misty urban landscape, Green Glass Ghosts is an evocation of that delicate, aching moment between youth and adulthood when we are trying, and often failing, to become the person we dream ourselves to be.

Ages 14 and up.

This publication meets the EPUB Accessibility requirements and it also meets the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG-AA). It is screen-reader friendly and is accessible to persons with disabilities. A Simple book with few images, which is defined with accessible structural markup. This book contains various accessibility features such as alternative text for images, table of contents, page-list, landmark, reading order and semantic structure.

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  • Reviews

    • School Library Journal

      April 9, 2021

      Gr 9 Up-In 2000 at the age of 19, the unnamed genderqueer protagonist arrives in Vancouver to start a new life after an abusive childhood. Spoon shows how this newly post-high school teen becomes an alcoholic and how drinking, and a cluster of mostly careless and often inebriated peers, bring them close to the brink of death. Unlike Go Ask Alice, this is not presented as a cautionary tale but rather as an authentic experience, capturing both the dramatic and truly monotonous parts of binge drinking. While the main character ignores behavioral characteristics that should be warnings, they share compelling details of how they handled the stresses of parental rejection and their first attempts to seek acceptance somewhere else. Spoon never uses gendered personal pronouns for anyone in a cast that includes a dozen LGBTQIA+ youth and a few parents, none of whose ethnicities are stated. Hall's occasional illustrations throughout are evocative, if inessential. This is a book that requires reading in full in order to realize its positive potency. VERDICT Both drinking and sober teens, and adults who care about them, will be rewarded for seeing this story through.-Francisca Goldsmith, Lib. Ronin, Worcester, MA

      Copyright 2021 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2021
      A tale of young queer survival. Before the days of smartphones and social media, the narrator hops on a plane from Calgary to Vancouver to escape a dysfunctional home life. But once there, they find that trauma--both individual and communitywide--is as prevalent in large, urban queer communities as it is in the repressive rural life they left behind. Rae (named by the illustrator in their note though never in the text) falls into a toxic relationship with the grifting Riki, performs music at queer open mics, and finds and loses work. Rae's unhealthy relationship with alcohol bubbles unexamined beneath the surface, and their decision in the epilogue to find sobriety comes abruptly. Everyone--including fathers, grandmothers, and Jimi Hendrix--is referred to with they/them pronouns, with occasional slips, and all characters are referred to as "people" or "person" rather than specific gender identifiers. If any racialized identities are present, those are similarly elided in the text (and while both the author's note and illustrator's note address at length the Indigenous inhabitants of Canada, no First Nations people are named in the story). Unfortunately, there is a certain flatness and similarity to the characters; nevertheless, this is a deeply satisfying and compelling look at one queer life that takes place in a different time and yet feels immediately resonant and recognizable. Occasional pen-and-ink illustrations support the text. A quiet yet powerful fictionalized memoir. (Fiction. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2021
      Grades 9-12 The year is 2000, one that symbolically promises a time for new beginnings. Appropriately, it's when Spoon's 19-year-old unnamed protagonist-narrator arrives in Vancouver, hoping to find a new life as a musician, far away from their Calgary home and deeply dysfunctional, sometimes abusive family. Their friend Sam greets them and gives them a place to stay until they meet Riki and fall in love. The two get an apartment together, but problems soon arise: the narrator abuses alcohol, suffers from wild mood swings, and, when Riki becomes involved with someone else, becomes suicidal. Spoon's deeply felt story is semi-autobiographical, and the reader gradually comes to understand that the narrator, like the author, is queer, trans, and nonbinary. Their affecting story is no stranger to anomie, and the illustrations by artist Hall capture the mood exactly, bringing a haunting quality to a narrative told in spare, unadorned prose that holds readers' attention to a cautiously optimistic conclusion.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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