Here in the United States, it's easy to become jaded about the coming out narrative. It can feel like a story we've read one time too many, one that has somehow become commodified, fraught with predictability. But every once in a while a novel comes along that shatters our jaded state and renews our faith in the queer coming of age genre. Abdellah Taïa's
Salvation Army is one such book.—
Lambda Report—
In a simple and straightforward language, the author leads the reader through a journey of uncertainty and self-discovery, beyond the nuanced resonance of words and emotions. Writing, which he discovers at an early age, involves for him a courageous and unprecedented act of exposing his country's taboos and prohibitions.
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Tingus Magazine—
Just when you thought you'd read every coming out story imaginable, a book as fresh and original as this one enlivens the genre.
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Frontiers in LA—
The novel is richly layered yet impressively lean, and as easily enjoyed by the pool as at a university library.
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Glen Helfand,
Bay Area Reporter—
This straightforward story about self-discovery is a reminder that coming-of-age tales still need to be told.
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Richard Labonte—