5*****
I don’t believe in safe spaces. They don’t exist. I do, however, believe in dangerous stories.
The perfect book to read over World Book Day and International Women’s Day 🌷💃🏻
Read as part of the Our Shared Shelf March pick.
Their greatest hopes rested on me, because I was a boy.... Except for two things that threw a monkey wrench into my parents carefully devised plans: I was wild at heart, and I wanted to be a girl..
This is a coming of age story of a young Asian trans-woman, self-describing as the greatest escape artist, Kung-fu expert and pathological liar, who makes the decision to run away from her parents abusive home in the downcast place of Gloom. She embarks on her own journey and finds her true friends and family with a group of completely fascinating femmes who live and work in a mysterious pleasure district know as the Street of Miracles.
While enveloped into the group, the protagonist is able to expand and transform into her own identity and become the woman she has always dreamed of becoming. When the murder of a fellow femme happens again on the Street of Miracles, our protagonist joins her femme sisters to form a vigilante gang of vicious, strong femme warriors: the 'Lipstick Lacerators'. This group hunts and fights against transphobes and violent Johns, avenging the deaths of murdered trans-women everywhere.
When out for an attack one night, things go terribly wrong and our heroine must find the truth within herself to stop the violence, to protect her new family and to allow herself to grow and develop as the femme she desires to be.
This was absolutely incredible and genre-bending. A fictionalised memoir blending poetry, storytelling, myth and magic. It held absolutely beautiful prose that was dreamlike and surreal in sequence. It was a fairy tale needed to explore dangerous girls, especially transwomen of colour, sisterhood, sex workers and lovers. While the writing had me completely captured with the descriptive lyrical prose, transformations and magic of mermaids, zombies and old witches, this memoir highlights the very real, and tragic, reality of a lot of trans-women. This includes the common occurrences of transphobia, transmisogyny, police brutality, sexual exploitation, abuse, racism and self-harm.
This book challenged the traditional transgender memoir to build into another world full of magical elements. Also the cover to this book is absolutely enticing! I will definitely have to re-read this in future.
You can't only be dangerous. You have to keep room for softness in your heart, and for sweetness too...You can only stop hurting when you stop hurting yourself.