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Book Cover for: Adam, Ariel Schrag

Adam

Ariel Schrag

Reader Score

53%

53% of readers

recommend this book

Set in 2006, Adam is a coming-of-age comedy that tells the story of an awkward teenager who goes to spend his final summer of high school with his older sister, who is very much a part of Brooklyn's young and diverse lesbian, queer and transgender scene. Over the summer, Adam, and all those around him, will experience love and friendship, learning the hard truths that those relationships often bring.

Ariel Schrag's scathingly funny and poignant debut novel puts a fresh spin on questions of love, attraction, self-definition, and what it takes to be at home in your own skin.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Harper Perennial
  • Publish Date: Jun 10th, 2014
  • Pages: 320
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.18in - 5.34in - 0.86in - 0.56lb
  • EAN: 9780544142930
  • Categories: LiteraryComing of AgeLGBTQ+ - Lesbian

About the Author

Schrag, Ariel: -

ARIEL SCHRAG is the author of the novel Adam and the graphic memoirs Awkward, Definition, Potential, and Likewise. Potential was nominated for an Eisner Award and Likewise was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award. Schrag has written for TV series on HBO and Showtime. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Praise for this book

"The book is sincere, dirty (but not in an excessive way), and downright hilarious. Schrag somehow manages to walk the increasingly thin tightrope of being respectful and yet brutally honest about transgender issues...While this book will surely be on the summer reading list for anybody with a family member or dear friend that fits under the LGBT umbrella, it could and should be enjoyable to anybody who picks it up. After all, its core message is universal. Surviving our teenage years is no small task." --The Daily Beast "[Ariel Schrag] the lesbian graphic memoirist, a successor to Alison Bechdel, breaks out..." --Boris Kachka, Vulture, "8 Books You Need to Read This June" "This hilarious, frank look at a young man pretending to be a trans-man in order to get a girl is transgressive and brutally honest--the rare book that pulls no punches for anyone."--Brooklyn Magazine, "25 Best Brooklyn Books of the Decade" "Colorful and smart, [ADAM] understands that the struggle to discover one's identity is somehow both ubiquitous and unique. With deep empathy and wit and humanity, Schrag has accomplished the seemingly impossible challenge of making the experience of marginalization and isolation feel universal." --Grantland, "June Book Recommendations: Young Adult for Adults" "Ariel Schrag is one of the most talented human beings alive...Schrag's writing is sharp and stylish but also effortlessly graceful; you almost don't notice how great her sentences are because they flow straight into your brain, situating themselves there like some better, funnier version of your own thoughts." --Emily Gould, The Millions "Compulsively readable, Adam sometimes seems like a YA novel, only with way more explicit sex. The book is also philosophical, presenting at its core, a question about gender, desire, and subjectivity: is sexual identity defined by who you have sex with, or who you think you're having sex with....The gimmick at the center of Adam is a good one, and the complicated issues it provokes are profound." -- Bookforum "While the book is funny, it's also quietly revolutionary--Schrag writes honestly about gender identity and sexuality in a way that's extremely rare, maybe unprecedented." --Gothamist, "Notable New Yorkers Share Their Summer Reading Recs" "A completely original story, Adam tells a coming-of-age tale that is both modern and timeless, and one that both blurs the boundary between 'young adult' and 'adult' fiction."--Mashable, "24 Must-Read Books for Summer 2014" "Not only is Adam a wonderful book, it is quite possibly the best entry in the coming-of-age category since Adam Wilson's Flatscreen...Adam is one glorious buildup to something that you know can't be a fairytale ending, and Schrag pulls it off in one funny, oddly sweet, and unique novel that nails a plot that just about anybody else would totally butcher." --Flavorwire, "Best Book of the Week" "Ariel Schrag's story about a teenager who goes to spend the summer in New York with his sister is unlike any coming-of-age story you'll read anytime soon. Funny and tender... Anybody familiar with Schrag's comics won't be disappointed with her work as a novelist; if you haven't read her other work, let Adam be your introduction and read everything else you can find of hers from there." -- Flavorwire, "10 Must Read Books for June" "The story is heartfelt and hilarious, and explores concepts of gender and sexuality that aren't really explored in other YA books. At least, none that I've read in recent memory. Definitely pick this one up. It'll stick with you. " --BookRiot, "Best Books We Read in --