The Inside of Out by Jenn Marie Thorne

The Inside of Out

by Jenn Marie Thorne

For fans of Casey McQuiston, Rachel Hawkins, and Rachel Dugan comes a story about bad allyship gone good. A Clueless and Emma for the modern age, this is a breezy but incisive tale of growing up, getting wise, and realizing every story needs a hero—sometimes it's just not you. 
 
When her best friend Hannah comes out the day before junior year, Daisy is all set to let her ally flag fly. Before you can spell LGBTQIA, she’s leading the charge to end their school’s antiquated ban on same-sex dates at dances—starting with homecoming. And if people assume Daisy herself is gay? Meh, so what. It’s all for Hannah, right? It’s all for the cause. What Daisy doesn’t expect is for “the cause” to blow up—thanks to Adam, the cute college journalist whose interview with Daisy for his college newspaper goes viral, catching fire in the national media. With the story spinning out of control, protesters gathering, Hannah left in the dust of Daisy’s good intentions, and Daisy’s attraction to Adam practically written in lights, Daisy finds herself caught between her bold plans, her bad decisions, and her big fat mouth.
 
“Nuanced...This book will fly off the shelves” VOYA, perfect score
“Smart, funny, and revealing” 
—Vox.com
“Recommend to fans of John Green and David Levithan” SLJ
“Compelling” Booklist
“A fresh, consistently engaging voice...The times are right for stories like [Daisy’s]”
 —BCCB
“A progressive book in a new era, one of the first of its kind” The Missourian

 

Reviewed by Bianca on

5 of 5 stars

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You don’t get it. You’re never going to get it. Because this is the problem with privilege. It’s a blindfold with a pretty picture of the world painted on the inside. You think it’s the truth. But it’s just your truth. You think homecoming is something you can play with, be reckless about, never mind the consequences—because there have never been consequences for you.


— Ahhhh I love this. An awesome take on privilege and about realizing that you can't/shouldn't always be the hero in every story + the book tackles LGBTQIA issues. 5 out of 5 mozzarella sticks!!

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 1 September, 2016: Finished reading
  • 1 September, 2016: Reviewed