![]() ![]() It's the hands of their parents that do the most damage, though it looks like Author Ebensperger's parents were either remarkably chill, if significantly out of their depth, or he glossed over some stuff. And weird kids suffer at the hands of their peers. What Author Ebensperger experienced, then, as a youth in a macho culture, wasn't external affirmation or even acceptance. But like everywhere else on Earth, at every time since there have been humans on Earth, people been usin' what they got to get their groove on since forever. The country legalized same-sex, um, relations in 1999. My Review: Chile isn't exactly famous for its history of QUILTBAG rights protections. I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA EDELWEISS+. ![]() ![]() The author, along the way to becoming an adult, realizes that the scrutiny of the world never ends, and that true acceptance must come from within yourself. The vibrant bright pink pages of Gay Giant paint a picture of what it was like to grow up being gay in the ’90s. Gabriel Ebensperger shares with us his struggles with his own inadequacy, his feelings of guilt, and above all, his fear that his “difference” will be discovered. A boy who sings on the playground instead of playing soccer, who likes Barbies, and whose secretly favorite toy car is the one called Tutti Frutti. The Publisher Says: A child who feels like an outsider in a world that’s set against him. ![]()
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