Ebook {Epub PDF} Ginjuh by Chase Connor






















Even the other people in school call me “Ginjuh”. How can a teenage guy come out to his family when they already tease him about his looks and his speech impediment? Why wouldn’t a person’s family realize the damage they can do to a child’s self-esteem with such taunts? “It’s all just in good fun, Ginjuh!” is what they tell me.  · Chase Connor. My name is not "Ginjuh" but that's what everyone calls me. It all started when I was 3-years-old at a family reunion and my speech impediment kept me from properly parroting what everyone else in the family was calling me. Fifteen years later and my speech impediment is marginally better but I still have a shocking wave of flame-colored hair, freckles, and I'm so shy I can 4/5(). GINJUH is another extraordinary novel to add to your Connor TBR stack. Connor writes vivid and poetic prose in lean, tidy style. He never overwrites. His beautiful sentences pull you from one to the next, always wanting more. His characters face extraordinary circumstances, for example, child abuse in “A Surplus of Light”/5.


Ginjuh: A Gay Coming-of-Age Tale. Chase Connor. nonfiction childrens lgbtqia+ emotional slow-paced. pages. Buy Browse editions. United States Bookshop US. Other countries Bookshop UK Blackwell's. The StoryGraph is an affiliate of the featured links. We earn commission on any purchases made. Buy Editions. Chase Connor has become one of my very favorite authors. I have yet to read a book of his that I don't absolutely love. This one was no exception. It's a coming-of-age story about Zach, who's been stuck with the awful nickname of 'Ginjuh'. It mainly takes place among the cornfields of his grandfather's farm. GINJUH: A Gay Coming-of-Age Tale: Connor, Chase: www.doorway.ru: Books. Skip to main www.doorway.ru Hello Select your address Books Hello, Sign in. Account Lists Returns Orders. Cart All. Best Sellers Customer Service Prime.


Hello, Sign in. Account Lists Returns Orders. Cart. Chase Connor. My name is not "Ginjuh" but that's what everyone calls me. It all started when I was 3-years-old at a family reunion and my speech impediment kept me from properly parroting what everyone else in the family was calling me. Fifteen years later and my speech impediment is marginally better but I still have a shocking wave of flame-colored hair, freckles, and I'm so shy I can barely look at my own reflection. Even the other people in school call me “Ginjuh”. How can a teenage guy come out to his family when they already tease him about his looks and his speech impediment? Why wouldn’t a person’s family realize the damage they can do to a child’s self-esteem with such taunts? “It’s all just in good fun, Ginjuh!” is what they tell me.

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