Monthly Archives: June 2023

Book Review: I Wish You All the Best by Mason Deaver

I Wish You All the Best   

Author: Mason Deaver

Publisher: Push

American release date: May 14, 2019

Format/Genre/Length: Hardback/Teen & YA LGBTQ+ Romance/336 pages

Overall Personal Rating: ★★★★★

Reviewer: Julie Lynn Hayes

It seemed like a good idea at the time. Coming out to his parents as non-binary, that is. Being honest  with them about who they really were. But for Ben de Backer, the truth quickly turns ugly when his horrified parents arbitrarily kick them out of their house. They have nowhere to go and nowhere else to turn except to Hannah, the older sister they haven’t spoken with in ten years, now married and living an hour away, in Raleigh (at least according to her Facebook).  Surprised to hear from her brother, she agrees to pick Ben up and take them to her home.

Ben tells Hannah the reason for what happened, and she is surprisingly supportive. Ben meets his brother-in-law, Thomas, who teaches chemistry at the local high school. Hannah rallies behind her brother, telling them they can stay with her and she’ll help him out with their needs – such as enrolling in school, buying new clothes (they left with only what they were wearing), as well as therapy. Ben isn’t sure about the last, but they agree to try. While waiting in the office on their first day of school, Ben meets a nice-looking affable fellow student named Nathan. Is it Karma that Nathan is assigned to show Ben around the school? They become fast friends. Maybe life will be better here…it certainly can’t get worse.

Or can it? As Ben’s feelings for Nathan grow, they’re afraid to say anything, afraid to lose him. Nathan is certainly supportive of everything Ben does, including their art, and encourages Ben to display his work at the student art show. How will Nathan feel when he sees the portrait Ben drew of him? Will they ever be accepted for who they are?

I really enjoyed reading this book, and loved Ben so much! I felt for him when he was kicked out by his parents, knowing how that feels, and was thrilled when Hannah stepped in to anchor his world. There are some wonderful characters, including Ben and Nathan, Meleika and Sophie, Hannah and Thomas, Mariam, and more. Ben’s fear of not being accepted for who they are is understandable, and only goes to show that we must all work hard to erase the negativity surrounding those who are not what others consider to be “normal”. In other words, a new “normal” needs to be established where pre-conceived notions of gender and sexual identity need to be rearranged. I think this book will go a long way toward doing that.

Kudos to Mason Deaver for writing such a beautiful and meaningful book. I look forward to reading more of their writings.

Wednesday Briefs: June 7, 2023

Here is a list of all the authors flashing this week, along with a brief snippet from their latest free work. Click the link after the snippet to be taken to the complete story on the author’s home page.

Bad Karma and the Family Plan #76 (15.6) by Julie Lynn Hayes

For that time of year, the temperature was fairly pleasant, being in the mid-fifties. Sunshine radiated down upon us as Ethan gave me a quick lesson in how to hang laundry. Not like it was rocket science or anything, but I wasn’t complaining. Gave me an excuse to have his hand over mine was he explained the intricacies of clothespin placement, punctuated by occasional kisses of approval.

Let’s be honest. Sleeping on the floor in the living room, with Ethan’s uncle, as well as Troy and Brendan, close at hand was not conducive to making love in any way shape or form. I was grateful that we could even snuggle together. But I wasn’t complaining, not really. I knew we’d make up for lost time as soon as we could. Probably after Benny gave his testimony and that was all taken care of.

“Thank you,” he

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Saturday is Horror Day #116 – The Orphanage, Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon

Reviewer: Julie Lynn Hayes

Saturday is Horror Day

Raised in an orphanage for handicapped children, Laura (Belen Rueda) and her husband Carlos (Fernando Cayo) purchase the now vacant building and move into it with their adopted son Simon (Roger Princep). Simon is not only unaware that he is adopted, but that he is HIV positive as well. Concerned that Simon’s only companions are the invisible friends he insists he plays with, Laura and Carlos arrange a get together for other parents of special needs children and their children. Simon tells her of his special friend Tomas, insisting he is real, and wears a cloth sack over his head. At the gathering, Laura sees such a child but he disappears. And suddenly Simon has disappeared, and Laura is beside herself, anxious to get her son back. Who are these invisible children, and could they hold the key to Simon’s disappearance?

In an effort to find Simon, Laura calls in a team of parapsychologists, led by Aurora (Geraldine Chaplin).

The Orphanage is a Guillermo del Toro film, and as such is beautifully crafted, less of a horror story than a ghost story. Laura must deal with the ghosts of her past even as she searches for her missing son. She refuses to give up, even when her husband insists they need to go. She is sure she can find him, given enough time. It’s a testament to the strength of a mother’s love, and the lengths to which one mother will go to get her child back.

The movie is well-written and acted. While not terrifying, it is haunting and tragic and worth watching.

I give this Film 3.5 Stars

Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon

A documentary crew led by Taylor Gentry (Angela Goethals) receives the opportunity of a lifetime when a man who claims to be the next great slasher/serial killer offers to let them film his story, from beginning to end. The man’s name is Leslie Vernon (Nathan Baesel), and he has a reign of terror planned for the sleepy little town of Glen Echo. He considers himself to be a worthy successor to such greats as Michael Meyer and Jason Voorhees. He takes the filmmakers on a practice run of what he intends to do before revealing his actual target – a waitress at a local diner, Jamie (Bridgett Newton). He’s been stalking her for some time, and he reveals how everything is going to go down, including how and where everyone will die. Except for Jamie. She will be his Survivor Girl. The one who will take him down. Why? Because she’s a virgin.

Leslie lays down certain rules that Taylor and the crew must obey, and one of them is that they must not talk to Jamie. They are observers, nothing more. They follow him as he silently terrorizes the poor waitress, leading up the grand finale at the party.

This film is both a mockumentary and an homage to horror films, including references to such films as Halloween and Nightmare on Elm Street. There’s even a detective played by Robert Englund, and Zelda Rubinstein, whom you might remember from Poltergeist, is there too. Leslie is very matter-of-fact in the way he tells Taylor et al what he intends to do and how he intends to do it. Even they come to realize there comes a point where they cannot remain passive witnesses to such horrific events and have to step in.

It’s not a bad film, and I do appreciate the intention behind it. However, and maybe this was just me, but I felt my attention wander from time to time, and I felt it was fairly predictable. Including the ending at the end of the credits. Not bad, just not memorable in my book. I’ll give it 2.5 Stars.