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The Very Queer Library

The Very Queer Librarian
Get a Rec

The Very Queer Library

Jacob Demlow

Welcome to The Very Queer Library! Here you’ll find recommendations for queer media of all kinds. Like any good library, the main focus is on books—but I’m also excited to dive into my favorite queer movies, musicals, plays, music, games, and more!

Back

The Very Queer Library

The Very Queer Librarian

The Very Queer Library

Jacob Demlow

Get a Rec

Welcome to The Very Queer Library! Here you’ll find recommendations for queer media of all kinds. Like any good library, the main focus is on books—but I’m also excited to dive into my favorite queer movies, musicals, plays, music, games, and more!

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Nothing Special
Nothing Special

Nicole Flattery

Bookshop
Amazon
The Very Queer Library

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NAMED A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY THE NEW YORKER AND TIME

From the author Sally Rooney called “bold, irreverent, and agonizingly funny,” a wildly original coming-of-age novel about a teenage girl working at Andy Warhol's Factory in 1960s New York.

New York City, 1966. Seventeen-year-old Mae lives in a rundown apartment with her alcoholic mother and her mother's sometimes-boyfriend, Mikey. She is turned off by the petty girls at her high school, and the sleazy men she typically meets. When she drops out, she is presented with a job offer that will remake her world entirely: she is hired as a typist for the artist Andy Warhol.

Warhol is composing an unconventional novel by recording the conversations and experiences of his many famous and alluring friends. Tasked with transcribing these tapes alongside several other girls, Mae quickly befriends Shelley and the two of them embark on a surreal adventure at the fringes of the countercultural movement. Going to parties together, exploring their womanhood and sexuality, this should be the most enlivening experience of Mae's life.

But as she grows increasingly obsessed with the tapes and numb to her own reality, Mae must grapple with the thin line between art and voyeurism and determine how she can remain her own person as the tide of the sixties sweeps over her.

For readers of Ottessa Moshfegh and Mary Gaitskill, this blistering, mordantly funny debut novel brilliantly interrogates the nature of friendship and independence and the construction of art and identity. Nothing Special is a whip-smart coming-of-age story that brings to life the experience of young girls in this iconic and turbulent American moment.

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