![]() An artful touch of science fiction allows history and modern times to literally collide, providing the unique opportunity to pay homage to LGBTQIAP+ activists from the past and illustrate how greatly their work impacted the present.įor cynical twenty-three-year-old August, moving to New York City is supposed to prove her right: that things like magic and cinematic love stories don't exist, and the only smart way to go through life is alone. But beyond that, there’s a complexity to this book as well. One Last Stop is a sweet love story filled with exquisite yearning and stolen kisses, and like many readers will do, I lost my heart to Jane. She’s been displaced from the 1970s by mysterious means. Incidentally, the Q is the only place where August can be with Jane because Jane is lost-in time. And ends up finding an unexpected community in her quirky roommates and coworkers and unexpected love from beautiful punk rocker Jane Su, whom she meets on the Q train subway line. In Casey McQuiston’s One Last Stop, the misfits and outcasts are drawn together because of-not in spite of-their differences, which include sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, and race, among other things, and I didn’t want to leave that found family behind when I reached the last page.Īn expert in finding missing persons, twenty-three-year-old August moves to New York City to find herself. As a result, I’ve spent a great deal of my life yearning for a sense of belonging. That feeling didn’t entirely go away at home either, because my mom, grandma, older siblings, and enormous extended family were pure Asian. Growing up mixed-race in suburban Minnesota, I always felt painfully different from my Caucasian peers. ![]()
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