Imaginary Friends - Couverture souple

Monje Jr, Michael Scott; Michaels-Dillon, Athena Lynn

 
9780997297126: Imaginary Friends

Synopsis

“The strange and terrible saga of Clay Dillon begins with the books Nothing Is Right and Imaginary Friends, and also includes Defiant (which takes place when Clay is 30 years old). The whole saga should be required reading for anyone who works in any capacity with the sort of young people who are often described as gifted, disturbed, troubled, oppositional, defiant, or exceptional…

In a way, Clay himself is an “imaginary friend” to the adults in his life, insofar as when they look at him they don’t see him but instead see an imaginary child, a product of their own misconceptions and projections who has no resemblance (except in the external physical sense) to the real Clay Dillon. Every adult in his life is consistently one hundred percent wrong, all of the time, about Clay’s motivations, needs, feelings, thoughts, and perceptions... They can imagine neither the extent and nature of his difficulties, nor the complexity and sophistication of his thinking.

In this respect, Imaginary Friends constitutes a warning to any adults – especially those in “helping” professions – who are so arrogant as to presume that they can truly understand the realities of their young charges.” – Nick Walker, from the Afterward to the book

"I started reading Imaginary Friends in the evening, big mistake. Dawn was just breaking when I finally finished, tears in my eyes, wanting more. A compelling and riveting story of a young boy trying to grow up different in a world that has no space, time, or words for such difference." - Karen Nakamura, author of A Disability of the Soul and Deaf in Japan

“On the surface, it is a breathtaking pageant of misunderstanding turned violent with pain and frustration. But behind that process is a larger truth, leaving hints of identity in its spoor as it claws through Clay, toward the frightening freedom of being openly known. Monje is creating more than a series of novels showing the inner experience of growing up different from others. This is a novel that inverts the stories of authority and centers Clay so firmly in his own narrative that it begins to loosen the knots of the lies we all grew up with. Imaginary Friends is a brickbat in an ongoing war fought just beneath the layers, just out of sight... for now." - Sparrow Rose Jones, author of No You Don't: Essays from an Unstrange Mind

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À propos de l?auteur

Michael is a trans and autistic writer from West Michigan. Her novels are built around themes of embodiment, plurality, and transition, but they range from surreal family dramas set in the recent past to fantastic speculative imaginings in sci fi and fantasy worlds. From 2011 to 2015, she wrote the Shaping Clay blog, which has been on hiatus since 2016, after which point she wrote for Cyborg Workshop Her novel Defiant was a Lambda Literary nominee in 2016, and she co-edited The Spoon Knife Anthology's initial volume that same year. Currently, Michael is planning to launch a new blog and to begin writing the next Clay Dillon book. While she does this, she also writes with The Puzzlebox Collective, a multimedia, multigenre art collective. Books Michael writes after 2016 will be released under the name Athena Lynn Michaels-Dillon.

Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.