Leaving the Station
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- $229.00
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- $229.00
Descripción editorial
Nina LaCour meets Alyson Derrick in this cross-country journey of identity, love, and friendships as Zoe tries to figure out her life, one train stop at a time.
Zoe’s life has gone off the rails.
When she left Seattle to go to college in New York, she was determined to start fresh, to figure out what being a lesbian meant to her, to experiment with clothes and presentation away from home for the first time.
Instead, she lost touch with her freshman orientation friend group, skipped classes, and failed completely at being the studious premed student her parents wanted her to be.
But the biggest derailment of all? Her newly minted ex-boyfriend—and the fact that she had a boyfriend to begin with. When she met Alden, he made her feel wanted, he made her feel free. He made her feel . . . like she could be like him, which was exciting and confusing all at once.
So, Zoe decides a second fresh start is in order: She’s going to take a cross-country train from New York to Seattle for fall break. There, no one will know who she is, and she can outrun her mistakes.
Or so she thinks until she meets Oakley, who’s the opposite of Zoe in so many ways: effortlessly cool and hot, smart, self-assured. But as Zoe and Oakley make their way across the country, Zoe realizes that Oakley’s life has also gone off the rails—and that they might just be able to help each other along before that train finally leaves the station.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Two white-cued teens find love on a cross-country train ride in this captivating romance by Arlow (The Year My Life Went Down the Toilet) that examines queer, religious, and personal identity. Jewish college freshman Zoe was initially excited for the fresh start that university would afford. Now, Zoe struggles to make sense of everything that happened during the previous few months, including conflicting feelings about ex-boyfriend Alden: did Zoe want to be with him, or did the teen want to be him ("I might not be who I thought I was... in regard to my gender")? On the Amtrak ride home to Seattle from New York City for Thanksgiving break, Zoe meets cool, intelligent, and attractive Oakley, also heading home to Washington. Oakley reveals that, despite navigating trauma related to her Mormon upbringing, she misses the community her religion offers, which she hasn't been able to find in N.Y.C. As the teens nurture a budding romance, narrative interstitials chronicle the events leading to Zoe leaving for Seattle. The contained, liminal-feeling Amtrak setting and the vibrantly rendered characters Zoe finds therein further enrich this propulsive volume anchored by the protagonist's resolute and retrospective first-person POV. Ages 14–up.