Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Avi Cantor Has Six Months to Live

Rate this book
Avi Cantor Has Six Months To Live

Avi comes across these foreboding words scrawled on the bathroom mirror, but what do they mean? Is this a curse, a prediction, or a threat from Avi's emboldened bullies? And how to they know his real name when he hasn't even told his mother yet?

Then there is Ian—the cool new guy at school, who is suddenly paying attention to Avi. Ian is just like Avi, but he is also all sunshine, optimism, and magic. All the things that Avi doesn't know how to deal with...yet.

A romantic, #ownvoices fairy tale for trans boys.

67 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 22, 2017

5 people are currently reading
1557 people want to read

About the author

Sacha Lamb

8 books149 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
245 (38%)
4 stars
244 (38%)
3 stars
106 (16%)
2 stars
22 (3%)
1 star
14 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 183 reviews
Profile Image for Nina ✿ Looseleaf Reviews ✿.
146 reviews62 followers
September 25, 2017
How was such a short story such a trip? Cause let me tell you, in 70 pages, I had feelings.

Avi Cantor is a quasi-magical story of a high-schooler mid-transition. While he has told no one his name--Avi--the words, "Avi Cantor has six months to live" appear on the bathroom mirror at school. What Avi assumes is an uncanny new bullying technique turns out to be a lot more complicated.

Without spoiling this beautiful story, let me tell you, that summary, while accurate, is not what the story is about. It's not about bullying; it's about self-loathing. It's not about avoiding death; it's about facing life.

I'm hesitant to call this magical realism, but it has a beautifully surreal and sardonic prose that fans of The Raven Boys--or even Marquez--would love. And I'll be damned if this isn't one of the most poignant books about depression that I've ever read!

P.S. If there is a movie/tv adaptation and Ian Alexander isn't Ian, I will consider the world ROBBED.

Read this review at:

Profile Image for Shira Glassman.
Author 20 books524 followers
September 19, 2017
Trans author Sacha Lamb shows us a love story between two trans teenage boys, with elements of magical realism. The main character is Jewish, depressed, and not out to school or mom yet, and speaks to us through a series of highly relatable confessions that feel like he's snuck inside your head and saying what you'd say if you were in his place. I'll let Avi's narrative voice provide their own testimony to the prose's strength:

(This paragraph made my heart do somersaults through so many emotions)
Looks just brown enough that you’re not sure where he’s from. Skips school for weird holidays even though his mom has to work all the time, so he just sits in his room, alone, and eats frozen food from the kosher section. Dresses like a boy, which is a problem, because none of us have any imagination.

The first moment when he meets the other boy, he catastrophizes and it's so relatable; it's pretty literally how I spent my morning yesterday, in fact.

Of boyfriend's family, composed of a cis mom, a trans mom, and a sister who plays violin (hurray!):
They just act like it’s normal, like a boy can be any old shape he wants and all they see when they look at him is the boy that he is.

Another line about the boyfriend's family that felt totally relatable to me in my darker moods:
Apparently nothing I do is a problem for them. I’m not sure I like it. It makes me feel unsettled, like I don’t quite know what shape I am anymore.

(Caveat that I do like being treated kindly by brand new friends; I can just relate to the "unsettled" feeling! I think it might come from a fear that we're not adequately reciprocating the kindness since it can be hard to reach out from inside depression. But that's up to Lamb, in this case.)

Another well-phrased line:
They don’t mind me staying in his room, even. In his bed. I don’t know what to think of the idea that they’re ok with all the things we aren’t actually doing.

This line gave me so many cultural feelings, and also made me feel warm and squishy inside because it's so validating for parents to cooperate with our queer identities:
My mom texts me in the middle of the night. I like that you chose your grandfather’s name.

And this line, for the same reason (tw: deadname at the end)
“Avraham,” mom says, behind me, as if she’s been saying it that way my entire life. The same tired tone she used to use for April.

I did get a little confused with the more magical-realismy elements, but that's because it's not a genre in which I'm terribly fluent. The likeability of the characters and their setup pretty much made up for that so even if magical realism confuses you, too, there's room for you here.

The references to Judaism and Jewishness were soothing and not presented in opposition to anyone's queerness, which as someone who looks to our traditions for comfort, I found soothing. (This is not to contradict those who have negative experiences; I'm just speaking for myself.)

FYI, this story does have deadnaming and misgendering, from characters the MC isn't out to yet, but the author is trans and trans people are allowed to write their own experiences. I'm including this warning for two reasons: first, to give trans readers a heads up, and secondly so cis readers who are also writers understand that just because Lamb did it doesn't mean we should. Additional TW for suicidal ideation.
Profile Image for anna.
693 reviews1,997 followers
September 22, 2020
rep: gay trans Jewish mc, gay trans li, wlw trans mother, wlw mother, Black side character

this was so sweet & soft & quite possibly introduced the gayest family i have ever known
Profile Image for Lindsay.
1,406 reviews264 followers
February 9, 2018
"Avi Cantor Has Six Months to Live": words written on a bathroom mirror using a name no-one is supposed to know. Avi hasn't come out yet and is still living his life as April, but people seem to know the message is about him. Depressed, a bit strange and a loner with problems at home, it's easy to believe. But then Avi meets Ian, another trans teenager and his wonderful and magical family. But despite the brightness that he brings into Avi's life there's still a countdown.

Two trans boys falling in love with diverse and loving families as well as an element of the supernatural all makes for a wonderful YA story that makes the most of its premise and its fantastic elements. A short and wonderful read.
Profile Image for jay.
1,094 reviews5,939 followers
April 7, 2023
i literally have nothing to say about it. it was okay, i guess.


read as part of 202-Queer 🌈✨

april reading: 4/26
Profile Image for Xan.
619 reviews264 followers
August 24, 2017
The publisher gave me a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

I loved this so much. I don't know how its possible that a book centering a trans boy getting bullied & feeling suicidal can actually feel appropriately light and warm & hopeful but this book totally manages it. There are so many good people on Avi's side, caring about him and wanting him to survive and seeing him for who he is, throughout the story, that even with the difficult content, it still felt so hopeful and warm to read. It doesn't minimize or handwave the bullying or suicidality away, it just...balances them. With this beautifully precise touch.

The writing is gorgeous and feels so deliberate and careful. I felt safe in it, even with this story that cuts so close to the bone for me.

I loved that Avi was surrounded by queer & trans characters, that Lilit was on his side too, that his boyfriend got to be fully himself and in his femmeness at home. I adored how deeply Jewish this story was; it was definitely part of what made it feel like I was wrapping myself in a cozy blanket.
As a Jewish trans reader, it means so much to me to have this story. It's the first contemporary story I have read with a Jewish trans MC, and it resonated so deeply, in so many ways.

I would gladly read a lot more about these characters, but this story worked for me at the length it was. It felt very much like it was written for trans readers, and for Jewish readers. It was for us first, and didn't cater to folks who wanted more explanation or more time in certain beats of the story because that's what they are used to getting. For example, many trans MG & YA stories would center Avi's coming out to his mom, give that moment in the story a lot of space & room & angst. This story held that experience in a way that really worked for me as a trans reader: one that focused on moments of choice and acceptance and care and love, without also making it a huge deal or even the biggest thing Avi is grappling with. This isn't a coming out as trans story, it's a story that includes Avi coming out, that's about other things. I loved that.

I struggled a bit with Avi getting outed, the origins of the intensification of him getting bullied. It was a hard moment in the story for me, as a reader. I hurt for Avi so much. In the end, I think it worked, and makes sense, and feels so real that it would unfold this way, that of course attempts to help go awry and this character is flawed and imperfect. The other aspects of the character felt more real, because of the flaws that are uncovered. So I do really think it worked and made the story better. Avi gets outed but it doesn't really get understood by the folks at school; that aspect felt so real and painful and complicated, like this encapsulation of the complexities of trans life.

The trans rep is wonderful. It is deeply real, resonated so much for me, has all these lovely details and references, and feels like it was written for trans readers. I especially liked the moment where one of the boys warns the other about the risks of sleeping in his binder, and he does it anyway. That felt so right to me. Yes, let young trans readers know it's not safe but also...let him be a boy who is reckless in that way, too. I loved the I loved that one of the adults was also trans and the reader finds this out with no fanfare.

I highly recommend this novelette; it's beautiful and heartwrenching and hopeful and cozy and gave me so many feels. The romance is sweet and lovely. I am so glad I got to read it, and that it is out in the world. This story is a lovely ex of how its v possible to tell stories abt hard aspects of being a trans kid that aren't bleak & full of despair. For that reason alone it is so deeply necessary.

Trigger Warnings
Profile Image for TheBookSmugglers.
669 reviews1,946 followers
Read
August 16, 2017
The latest - and final - novelette in our Gods and Monsters season. This is Gay YA, about a Jewish trans boy who is struggling with depression and bullying, finding acceptance and love with another trans boy - it features awesome lesbian moms, a super great friendly demon, hilarious kisses and a happy ending.

Goodreads reviewers who want a review copy, send me a message!
Profile Image for Justine.
1,420 reviews380 followers
November 21, 2018
A wonderful story about two trans boys falling in love. I loved the way the story touched on the emotional processes of recovery from depression, of finding and feeling worthy of love and life, and the myriad emotional complexities of transition. The added fantastical element was a lovely touch.

Deftly written with an endearing humour, this is a gem of a read.

“Neither of my moms are technically witches,” he says, primly. “We are just a highly intuitive family. With, uhh, an especially fine-tuned sense of impending doom.”

“Mine too,” I tell him. “It’s called being Jewish. Doesn’t make me magic.”
Profile Image for Dahlia.
Author 21 books2,811 followers
Read
April 30, 2018
The magic in this one is not my personal thing, but I loved the writing so, so much and immediately tweeted at the author to make sure he has more trans boy YA coming, because lord knows we need it and I think his voice is just A+.
Profile Image for Skye Kilaen.
Author 19 books375 followers
January 16, 2019
A dark but ultimately hopeful YA novella about suicidal gay trans Jewish boy Avi and how his life changes when he meets sunny, optimistic gay trans classmate Ian. Avi is deeply unhappy, prickly, often cruel as a way to protect himself, but he also desperately needs the completely different world Ian offers him access to, with warmth and family acceptance and love. Not a spoiler: having these things offered to you doesn't mean you can immediately reach out and take them. Loved the magical (and other) realism, definitely looking forward to reading more of Lamb's work in the future.
Profile Image for Dov Zeller.
Author 2 books125 followers
February 26, 2018
Something about this book. The tensions between controlled and careful prose and storytelling and absolute conversational ease--and a poetry that comes not from one or the other, but from the places they meet and the places they wrestle. I couldn't put Avi Cantor down and though it hurt a bit too much in moments, because of all the emotional intelligence, and a touch of cruelty between people who care for each other, the vivid portrayal of a relationship in which there is a great need for treading carefully, with Ian trying to find ways to connect with Avi in and through and around brokenness. All of the ways we push each other away to protect ourselves...There was a lot of emotional pain in here I could relate to, more than I was exactly comfortable with, and yet I'm so glad I found this book and grateful to have read it. I laughed, I cheered, I worried. I wondered.

Other considerable tensions: between sweetness and intimacy and bitterness and/or prickliness; between self care and care for others...

What if, taking care of ourselves means hurting others? What if someone else's desire to take care of us feels puzzling and dangerous, because it's unfamiliar, and because it is an invitation to a kind of intimacy that feels terrifying, or because sometimes taking care of someone else is an act of seeing and deep compassionate connection, and at other times, it's a way of looking past or through, a form of objectification or condescension or belittlement. So how do we parse all the new signals we're getting, particularly given that all information is filtered through synapses that have already been firing in very specific patterns for a good long time. (How do we shift patterns that have become, to a degree, ingrained?) And what if the borders of everything aren't exactly clear? Particularly when we enter into new social and emotional territory.

This book explores all these questions and it's magnificent in all that says and all that it leaves to the reader and to the characters' private lives. It is equally compelling in its focus and its unfocus. It's a love story, a fairy tale, a tale of magic, but in a way, it's about the magic we hold within ourselves... Queer magic in Jewish time.

Here are some quotes that I love. This is Avi's first person narration:

They [Ian's family] just act like it’s normal, like a boy can be any old shape he wants and all they see when they look at him is the boy that he is.

[Ian] looks at me. His eyes are deep, deep, deep. Why did I think he was so easy to read, the first time I met him?

I wonder if they talk about how their son picked me up out of nowhere, and now I’m here all the time. I wonder if they ask each other what my home life is like, why I never have to call a parent to ask for permission for anything, ever. I wonder if when they keep refilling my plate without asking, it’s on purpose. I wonder if they want to adopt me, add me to their collection of mismatched children.

Apparently nothing I do is a problem for them. I’m not sure I like it. It makes me feel unsettled, like I don’t quite know what shape I am anymore.

There’s an extra month in the Hebrew calendar this year, and the High Holy Days don’t come until October, and it’s cold. Ian asks me about Rosh Hashanah, the week before. Do you have plans? I never talk about my family. I can tell from the way he looks at me that he’s worried he isn’t allowed to ask.

It’s magic, their house. The way they’re all obsessed. Rosa with her cooking. Alice and Gabriella with their music, Gabriella’s plants and frogs.

I sleep with my head on his shoulder and I dream that I’m on a soft, green planet where no one exists who can hurt me.

The thing about a crossroads. It’s just an intersection, that’s what we call it now. I go to the one by the cafe, where Ian always takes me for cider. At the middle of that intersection, at the crossroads, there’s a tiny island of withered grass and a bench where no one ever sits, because who wants to sit in the middle of traffic? I sit there now and light my candle, hunching over to protect it from the wind. Wax drips onto my fingers and snow collects in my hair, on my shoes, on the road around me. There’s not much traffic, because of the snow, and everything sounds hushed. I don’t have a real winter coat, and I’m shivering. I sit and stare at the candle and it occurs to me that I don’t know if there are words one is supposed to say to summon a demon. Ian’s instructions have gone out of my head. If I try to picture the file he sent me, all I see is the look on his face when I told him we’re not the same.

He acts all confident, but he still has secrets. Parts of himself he feels he has to shut away. As if the ease with which he passes makes it harder for him to break trivial boundaries.

“Huh?” he says. “What?” He blinks at me, owlish, behind the glasses he almost never wears. I have a strange urge to lean over, take them off him, and poke out his eyeballs so he can never look at me with that expression of baffled concern again.

We sit side-by-side on Ian’s bed, legs under the covers, watching cartoons. He’s taken off his wholesome costume and he’s wearing a Tinkerbell tank top and no binder, out of gender-conforming camouflage. We forgot to ask Lilit about magic top surgery.

From the afterward by the author: The emotional atmosphere of the story hinges on the ideas of cold/warmth, loneliness/togetherness, fear/safety and touch starvation/affection, the contrast between, and eventual coming together of, Ian’s warm, comfortable world and Avi’s cold, isolated one.
Profile Image for bri.
435 reviews1,408 followers
Read
October 21, 2022
CW/TW: deadname (brief), bullying, outing, absent parent, homophobia (minor), transphobia (minor), suicidal ideation, mental illness, fatphobia (brief)
Profile Image for Iona Sharma.
Author 12 books175 followers
Read
June 5, 2019
I had heard many good things about this! But it's kind of disappointing. Avi, the main character, is a Jewish trans boy in some unidentified US high school environment, who meets another another trans boy called Ian and they (sort of) fall in love. The thing is, Avi is Jewish, and trans, and suicidal, and that's kind of it. He doesn't seem to have any other interests other than those, and not really those: we hear about his Jewishness as a fact, but not why it's important to him (he skips school on Jewish holidays and then ignores them? why?); we hear he chose his grandfather's name, but nothing about his grandfather. His boyfriend has much more of a personality, but it's hard to see what he sees in Avi, who has lines like "I didn't tell her my name, except I think maybe I did, by letting my loneliness pour out of me like lost body heat". I'm not saying you can't have a sad, lonely main character! But give us something about this kid that's not just "he's sad and trans".
Profile Image for Abi (The Knights Who Say Book).
644 reviews111 followers
December 3, 2020
2020 review: Every time I reread this I'm like "Surely it won't make me cry this time" but it always does make me cry this time.

2019 review: Aah there are so many little details I'd forgotten! like one of Ian's moms being trans and the humor at the ending with the second mirror message, also I shed one single beautiful tear into my pillow while reading. Not because anyone dies of course just because Sacha Lamb's writing is Like That.

2017 review: I loved this so much?? The Jewish jokes! The adorable romance! The intensity and originality! Sunshine boys and grumpy boys and an overabundance of moms (that's a lie, there's exactly the right amount of moms in this book). I would read a full novel of this, though of course the condensed short story format has its merits. Read it!
Profile Image for Cameron Sant.
Author 6 books19 followers
August 18, 2019
UHHH did you all know that you can read this for free here??? https://www.thebooksmugglers.com/2017...
Because I did not!

You can tip the author here! https://ko-fi.com/eggrabbi

Also at the beginning of the story the trans guy hits on the protagonist all like, "Hey, you're trans too, let me buy you coffee," and I'm like "wow rude" but I'm also like "I've probably totally done that at some point in my life"

Also I'm totally here for trans for trans stories
Profile Image for sarah y.
28 reviews
July 9, 2018
i read the first three paragraphs of this and IMMEDIATELY texted it to everyone that i know. if i were to give this an endorsement i would say it's mandatory reading! for everybody! so so good.
Profile Image for roma.
389 reviews109 followers
June 19, 2021
love between trans people is something that can be so personal

rep: jewish trans gay mc, trans gay li, sapphic trans sc, sapphic sc, black sc's
Profile Image for Saima.
460 reviews30 followers
June 14, 2021
3.7/5 stars.

A very sweet and heartfelt read. I loved both Avi and Ian and thought they were adorable.

It's a sweet mlm t4t romance, with magic sprinkled in (well, more like thrown in at the end). It's simultaneously sweet but also dark as Avi deals with transphobia and suicide ideation, but with a brilliant resolution that's full of love.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Claudie Arseneault.
Author 21 books462 followers
Read
February 17, 2019
tw for suicide ideation, school bullying, transphobia

I've meant to read this for ages, and it turns out it was much shorter than I thought, so I just binged it! For all that it deals with heavy subjects, AVI CANTOR is a super sweet and hopeful YA romance between two trans boys and I really enjoyed it. Definitely recommended. <3
Profile Image for Fabulitas.
108 reviews10 followers
December 17, 2017
It's very sweet, pity that the magic stuff isn't as well done as the teenage stuff.
Profile Image for silky.
243 reviews3 followers
August 1, 2018
4 stars!

“It’s better to make life out of life, right?”

I knew nothing about this story before I read it, two friends mentioned it to me, so I thought it was about time I read it, and I'm so glad I did.

Avi is a high school student who one day finds the words "Avi Cantor Has Six Months to Live" written in the school bathroom. It could be more pointless cruel bullying he receives, or it could be a warning. The message also brings the kind and beautiful Ian into his life. It's as it describes: "A romantic, #ownvoices fairy tale for trans boys."

This really is such a kind and wonderful story, the plot is amazing, the voice is strong and makes you care so much for these boys, and it's a short and sweet read. I totally fell in love with Avi and along with him too, his story is really special, and I loved to see him grow, gain agency and feel self-worth.

It's really hard to 1) find LGBT books that can just be a nice read (often they deal with darker themes/get explicit - which is fine and we need those stories too, I would just like as much diversity as het books get) 2) a LGBT story that features a trans lead !!! - So I'm really glad this story exists, and you should 100% read it! I don't want to say too much about the story ( I think it's even better going in expecting nothing cause it will definitely pleasantly surprise you) but it's good, believe me.

Recommended for: anyone looking for a short and GOOD read, especially if you want good LGBT (with the main focus on trans) representation.

Profile Image for Mariam.
931 reviews79 followers
June 28, 2018
This was such a lovely surprise. The Jewish rep, the trans rep, the depression rep in general was so delicious and enchanting. This has magic tied up with transgender identity mixed with family and belonging and makes you ceave so many hugs. Just. The best thing I've read recently with any trans rep. Also it has a really cute (if a bit messy) mlm romance.
Profile Image for sofia.
155 reviews35 followers
August 2, 2019
This is such a sweet, captivating story about two trans boys falling in love and summoning a demon and y’all should read it.

Avi and Ian were so easy for me to love and root for. This story leans into the grumpy one falls in love with the sunshine one trope, and I adored it. I also have so much more appreciation for this story after reading this blog post by the author. He put into words a lot of the things that I appreciated about this story, particularly the usage of emotional atmosphere, which “hinges on the ideas of cold/warmth, loneliness/togetherness, fear/safety and touch starvation/affection, the contrast between, and eventual coming together of, Ian’s warm, comfortable world and Avi’s cold, isolated one.” This was such a beautiful, sweet story.

The pacing and progression of the plot was a bit messy, and the incorporation of magic felt a bit sudden and underdeveloped, but. I was so captivated by this story and by Avi and Ian and I just loved it a lot. The atmosphere and emotion that charges this story kept me invested the whole way through. I really recommend this one.
Profile Image for Antonella.
1,541 reviews
September 1, 2021
Please don't balk at the title, or at the warnings. This is a wonderful and sweet short story about two trans boys. It is a bit sad at times, but it also conveys hopefulness.

I liked the use of the language, the humor and Avi's snarkiness. I loved the very supportive Ian's moms, by the way one of them is a trans woman. Once Avi's mom is informed, she is also naturally supportive.

The relationship between Ian and Avi is beautiful and slowly developing. You cannot help rooting for them. IMO the trans rep is excellent.

The magical element blends well with the rest of the story.

As far as I understand this novelette is not available anymore to buy, but you can read legally and for free here. And you can read about the author's Inspirations and Influences.

Warnings: depression, bullying, misgendering, deadnaming, suicidal thoughts

Disclaimer: I'm a white cis woman.
Profile Image for Helena (helinabooks).
459 reviews348 followers
June 9, 2018
This was such a cute read and here's a list of reasons to read it:
- It features two cute trans boys in love
- The mc is Jewish and there are lots of jokes about it
- One of the boys has two mums, one of them who's also trans and the other is Latinx (I think?), and a black sister. They're the softest family ever and I want them to adopt me and give me cookies.
- There's magic!!!! And nice demons that give you cupcakes
- FEELINGS EVERYWHERE
- This sole dialogue:
“Neither of my moms are technically witches,” he says, primly. “We are just a highly intuitive family. With, uhh, an especially fine-tuned sense of impending doom.”
“Mine too,” I tell him. “It’s called being Jewish. Doesn’t make me magic.”
He smiles at me, soft. “But you are magic, though.”
“Wow, Ian. Gay.”
“You’re gay,” he says.
“Your mom.”
“I mean, yeah.”


You can read it for free here
782 reviews5 followers
July 17, 2019
This was a delightful, quirky, slice of life queer teen romance with a side order of Judaism and magic. I loved the way much of the story was handled, even the bits where the two main characters don't quite manage to communicate well. And it is the kind of story that would bear reading again, just to get the nuances.
Profile Image for Max.
103 reviews68 followers
August 26, 2017
I loved this so much I almost made myself late for work reading it. I loved it so much I immediately went and bought a copy for Kindle so I could have it on my phone for whenever I want to reread. I loved it A LOT.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 183 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.