This is a book about people who like horror who are queer. It’s mostly people just talking about their own coming out stories and how those loosely (very loosely) tie to popular horror movies. This is not worth your money. Just Google some queer horror essays or YouTube videos and save a credit.
View: joelfroomkin - page 355
one hell of a ride
Review from Out of the Blue →
the story itself is incredible. all three Mc share enough space for one book, and you get a sense and feel for them. the voices between park and Lan are hard to distinguish a bit, at times they blur together, but even despite that this tory left me crying at the end. what a hell..
A vivid conclusion to the trilogy. I admire Hall’s commitment to take us into the tangled mess of the human condition and into its heights of awareness, humor and generosity – at times an almost gothic tale of grasping at shadows and at others a sort of giddy romp through life’s most thrilling possibilities. I..
Extremely Tedious.
Review from Unspoken Vow →
when change comes
Review from Unscripted →
Good story
Review from His Cocky Valet →
this is a decent story especially when the author states he wrote it so quickly to be petty. not gonna lie I would have read it if the only part in the blurb said it was written to be petty. Joel Leslie you are as always a fantastic narrator and I literally only found this..
I usually don’t listen to books narrated by Joel Leslie, because his voice sounds like a drunk on the verge of belching or farting…but this book had a very important message for all queer people. Although fictional, this sweet story is based on historical facts and gives great insight into what queer people had to..
I don’t think so
Review from Switched →
Too much rambling
Review from Conspiracy of Dragons →










