Taylor Saracen

Electric Soul

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Joey Mills doesn’t know who he wants to be. He isn’t even sure who he doesn’t. All he knows is that he thinks about it less than other people who try to mold themselves into certain boxes they are convinced they need to fit into. He always fit in just by being himself. Or maybe that is what he trains his brain to believe, that he is who he wants to be, and that people want to be around whoever he is. Thinking about it too much is a dangerous exercise in self-doubt, one he doesn’t have the patience to participate in. Why doesn’t he tell people he is gay? Why is it off-limits if he truly doesn’t worry about what people think of him? Maybe it’s time for a change.
Rise Up is a series of new adult novels that illuminates pivotal moments in the lives of LGBTQ youth. Each novel features a fresh protagonist and his experience navigating the ups and downs of adulthood. While the characters change and the stories vary, common themes--including the struggle for independence, identifying one's passions, searching for acceptance and for love--are interwoven through the pages of the novels. These stories will open your eyes to worlds of possibilities, both conventional and off-beat, as these men take you on their journeys to self-discovery.
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207 printed pages
Original publication
2019
Publication year
2019
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Quotes

  • Aleksey Shadrunovhas quoted5 years ago
    “Oh, that looks delicious,” the lady crooned, shimmying her crotchety body excitedly. “Have you ever seen a nicer meatball sub, Irv? So saucy!”

    “Mmm,” her husband nodded, smoothing a napkin over his lap.

    Joey wondered how often they spoke, like really talked about things deeper than the aesthetics of a sandwich. They were nearing eighty, if they weren’t already there, and had no doubt been together for a large chunk of those years. When did people run out of things to say to one another? There had to be days or years when they had nothing to say. How did they push past those times to be sitting in a booth at D’Antonio’s a century later, commenting on balls of beef? Marriage was a fucking mess of commitment. And boring, it was surely boring. It rarely ever worked, and when it did, Joey doubted it was worth the effort.
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