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After a rough tumble and maybe-serious head injury, a disillusioned trans poet falls for a charming corporate lawyer in a love story that grapples with the explosive ghosts of relationships past, romantic and familial, from the Lambda Award-nominated author of Bellies, Nicola Dinan “Fell down the stairs and woke up a trad wife.” Max is thirty, a published poet and grossly overpaid legal counsel for a tech company. With a lifetime of dysphoria and fuccbois rattling around in her head, Max is plagued with a deep dissatisfaction during what should be the best years of her life. After taking a spill down the stairs at a New Year’s Eve party, she decides to make some changes. First things first: a stab at good old-fashioned heteronormativity. Max thinks she’s found the answer in Vincent, a corporate lawyer and hobby baker, whose trad friendship group may as well speak a foreign language, and whose Chinese parents never pictured their son dating a trans woman. This uncharted territory may have rough terrain, but Vincent cares for Max in a way she’d long given up on as a foolish fantasy. Yet Vincent is carrying his own baggage from his gap year in Thailand a decade prior: an explosive entanglement with a mysterious, gorgeous traveler. Voice-driven, warm, and poignant, Disappoint Me is an exploration of millennial angst, race, trans panic, and the allure of bourgeois domesticity that asks if we are defined by our worst mistakes.
Publication Year: 2025
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Max is our transfemme protagonist, who is navigating a new relationship with Vincent, adapting to evolution of friendships in your 30s, all while trying to find joy in writing poetry, and push through the day to day of a corporate job. Vincent is Max’s sweet, supportive boyfriend who is navigating some past trauma & mistakes, and trying to work through that while showing up and showing out for Max. Both Max and Vincent have problematic, but supportive family and friends. Their parents all mean well but conform to societal and cultural expectations. Max has a narcissistic, yet fiercely loyal brother. Vincent has a levelheaded best friend with a dark & violent past. Nicola Dinan’s writing style is superb. She effortlessly explores the complicated terrain surrounding these characters, with themes of violence against transgender people, compulsive heteronormativity, family problems, forgiveness, and worth. The writing of Nicola is eloquent and deep, without distracting from the story. Her words are descriptive, they place you within the pages, transporting you to Max’s point of view. I could not put this book down & am eager to read Nicola’s other projects. Thank you, NetGalley & The Dial Press for the ARC and the opportunity to review it!