Will on the Inside
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- 13,99 €
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- 13,99 €
Publisher Description
"An honest, sophisticated look at the myriad emotions surrounding chronic illness and growing up 'not straight' in a religious Georgia town." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Relatable, real, and utterly engrossing." —School Library Journal (starred review)
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After dedicated soccer player Will is sidelined from the season—and his friend group—due to complications from his newly diagnosed Crohn’s disease, he finds himself figuring out who he really is on the inside in this heartfelt and thoughtful middle grade novel that's perfect for readers who love books by Maulik Pancholy and Christine Day.
Will loves playing center midfield on his middle school soccer team. This year, though, Will hasn't felt like himself; his stomach has been bothering him, and he has no energy at all. When his new doctor diagnoses him with Crohn's disease, Will hopes that means he’ll start feeling better soon and he can get back to playing with his team before the season ends.
But Will's new medicines come with all kinds of side effects, Forced to sit out afternoon practice, Will finds himself hanging out with a kid at school, Griffin. This could be a real problem, seeing as Griffin just asked Will’s best friend to the spring dance. As in, guy friend. What would Will’s teammates say if they knew the whole story? Not to mention Will’s friends at church.
With all these changes happening faster than he can process them, Will knows that he has a lot to figure out about who he really is on the inside.
Andrew Eliopulos's novel is a memorable, affecting story that will have wide appeal. It was selected as a Junior Library Guild title, a Children's Cooperative Book Center CCBC Choices title, and a book of the year by the New York Public Library and School Library Journal and was named one of "6 LGBTQ+ Kids' Books We Need More Than Ever" by Kirkus Reviews.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Based on lived experience, Eliopulos (The Fascinators) presents an honest, sophisticated look at the myriad emotions surrounding chronic illness and growing up "not straight" in a religious Georgia town. When his recent Crohn's disease diagnosis forces him to step back from his soccer team, seventh grader Will McKeachie worries he'll lose his "built-in friend group," including best friend Henry. While waiting for medication to curb his symptoms, Will escapes the uncomfortable attention of sympathetic acquaintances via an online fantasy video game that he plays with classmate Griffin Miller, who's similarly avoiding the spotlight after enduring homophobic bullying following his publicly asking Henry to the school dance. When Will realizes he's attracted to Griffin, memories of the history of his soccer teammates' own homophobic bullying prompt Will to suppress his romantic feelings. His worsening Crohn's symptoms, coupled with emotionally charged conversations surrounding sexuality both at school and in his Baptist youth group, exacerbate his fears that people like Griffin—and maybe Will himself—will never be accepted. Eliopulos forges a hopeful tone through conversational first-person narration, multifaceted friendships, and a familial church community striving toward inclusivity, even as the narrative confronts the psychological impact of homophobia and religious trauma on queer youth. Main characters cue as white. Resources conclude. Ages 8–12.