All my friends are invisible : when the world doesn't understand you, it's time to create your own : a memoir / Jonathan Joly.
Material type:
- 9781529420616
- Joly, Jonathan, 1980- -- Childhood and youth
- Gender identity
- Transgender people -- Identity
- Vloggers -- Great Britain -- Biography
- Imaginary companions
- Gender Identity
- Identité sexuelle
- Transgenres -- Identité
- Blogueurs vidéo -- Grande-Bretagne -- Biographies
- Compagnons imaginaires
- Dublin (Ireland) -- Social conditions -- 20th century
- 23 820 JOL
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Education Library Open Access Section | 820 JOL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 13350 |
Browsing Education Library shelves, Shelving location: Open Access Section Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
820 GON Last violent call / | 820 GON Last violent call / | 820 GON Foul heart huntsman : book two in the foul lady fortune duet / | 820 JOL All my friends are invisible : when the world doesn't understand you, it's time to create your own : a memoir / | 820 MID Red mist / | 820 MID Red mist / | 820 NES Burn / |
A memoir - tp.
A mesmeric, harrowing and uplifting childhood memoir that will open up much-needed conversations about identity and mental health. It was an ordinary day in 2016. In Gatwick Airport, Jonathan and his wife Anna were having breakfast with their two little children while waiting for their flight to be called. And then it happened, a familiar sensation that Jonathan hadn't had for decades: an out-of-body experience that transported him to another place, the safe place he used to escape to in his mind when he was a boy. Because growing up in conservative 1980s Dublin, where there was little tolerance for children who were 'different', Jonathan Joly was, indeed, a different sort of child: creative, expressive, and - on the inside - a girl. The limitations of the people around him to understand his differences led to years of tyrannical bullying and abuse, forcing him to withdraw within himself to the point of clinical absence -- Source other than Library or Congress.
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