
Each character is as real as the protagonist, each with as much care and thought and history as the rest. The characters in this book are fantastic. She's a protagonist you truly root for and care about. Coming to terms with your own sexuality – no matter what it may be – can be a confusing and challenging process, and this was incredibly well written in Georgia. She's empathetic to the extreme and a deeply loyal friend – even whilst she's in the depths of despair. She cares very deeply about her friends and can't bear the thought of hurting them. She rockets through a rollercoaster of confusion, desperation, mistakes and self-hatred as she navigates her own sexuality. She's always loved the idea of love and yet can't experience it. Georgia Warr is a wonderful protagonist – painfully real and honest, intelligent, and heart wrenchingly confused. But isn't that what she's supposed to want? Isn't that what everyone is supposed to do? How come everyone else can do it? Why can't she? But when the opportunity presents itself in any kind of real, tangible and physical way for her - she's disgusted by it. And she's desperate to feel something and fall for someone. But the reality for her has always been different. With the idea of love, the idea of falling madly for someone and finding bliss. Georgia is a teenager who's embarking on her first year of university and is in a desperate struggle to figure herself out. Publisher: Harper Collins Children's Books

Summary: An addictive heartfelt, painful, honest and fun YA LGBTQ+ novel about a girl finding who she is as she begins her time at university.
