![]() ![]() That web comes apart eventually, but after tears and confessions Holly discovers that her true friends are untroubled by her home arrangements. But what with the domestic tension, the complicated web of lies she has to concoct, plus the self-inflicted pressure to fit in, to keep silent when she hears casually malicious references to dykes and fag hags, from the outset she doesn’t much like what she’s becoming. Her hurt but loving parents agree to go along with the deception, at least when her new friends are around. Upset after an episode of ostracism at summer camp, Holly decides to take advantage of a move to create a new persona for herself: “Yvette,” sophisticated, non-athletic, fond of ruffles and boys, above all, with a normal family. Garden ( The Year They Burned the Books, 1999, etc.) again traverses scantly explored territory with this earnest tale of an adopted child who tries to cover up the fact that her two moms are gay. ![]()
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