

She’s going to be the star of the school play and convince her parents to let her go to the performing arts high school. It’s a story of a delicate phase of adolescence, of looking for acceptance & reassurance, of figuring out what kind of person you want to be when you grow up.Introducing Brie Hutchens: soap opera superfan, aspiring actor, and so-so student at her small Catholic school.

In the Role of Brie Hutchens isn’t just a gay coming-out story, even though that’s a major plot point. Which is another thing I deeply appreciate: showing that even if your own family doesn’t accept you, there are others who will. This is not a dark, hopeless story in any capacity. But the way it was framed, it was obvious this is a story for LGBT audience, for kids who also don’t have perfect parents & who need someone to tell them that “hey, you should put yourself first, your mom should love you unconditionally”.Īnd while Brie’s mom did not know how to deal with her daughter (and the narrative was clear on the fact it’s not her who should be dealing with anything here), Brie had a number of supportive people around her. I do not mean to say I enjoyed watching Brie navigate her life without that vital support that her mother should have been offering - quite the opposite really. It starts already a bit strained, with Brie wondering if her mom even likes her, and as Brie gets more and more sure she’s not straight, that relationship only gets worse. My favourite aspect of the book is definitely Brie’s relationship with her mother, though. So much packed into one book, so much trusted on a shoulder of a kid who’s just trying to figure out how to be herself. And on top of all that, she’s a kid in eight grade. She’s experiencing her first crush, while listening to her best friend talking excitedly about a different boy every day. The family has financial problems and Brie dreams of going to an expensive private acting high school, which would help her become an actress.

Her mother is very religious and devoted to Virgin Mary, whereas Brie has trouble even focusing during mass. She goes to a Catholic school where a boy got suspended for just googling gay stuff on his phone. The story itself is pretty simple (a teen start figuring out her sexuality & the world doesn’t make it easy for her), but it’s not the dry outline that makes a book, is it? It’s the emotions all the events bring, it’s the character’s journey, her path to growing up & fighting for herself.īecause, you see, Brie has a lot to struggle with.

It’s also very clearly an ownvoices story and that truth shines through every page and settles this specific kind of calm over the reader. This book was an emotional punch straight to the heart, in all the best (gay) ways.
