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Social Queue

Social Queue 1

by Kay Kerr
Paperback
Publication Date: 28/09/2021
5/5 Rating 1 Review

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A funny and insightful Own-Voices novel about an autistic teen who realises she's been missing all the signs when it comes to her romantic life.

I thought I was nobody's teen crush, but turns out I was just missing the signs.

Zoe Kelly is starting a new phase of her life. High school was a mess of bullying and autistic masking that left her burnt out and shut down. Now, with an internship at an online media company-the first step on the road to her dream writing career-she is ready to reinvent herself. But she didn't count on returning to her awkward and all-too-recent high-school experiences for her first writing assignment.

When her piece, about her non-existent dating life, goes viral, eighteen-year-old Zoe is overwhelmed and more than a little surprised by the response. But, with a deadline and a list of romantic contenders from the past to reconnect with for her piece on dating, she is hoping one of her old sparks will turn into a new flame.

Social Queue is a funny and heart-warming own-voices autistic story about deciphering the confusing signals of attraction and navigating a path to love.

ISBN:
9781922458018
9781922458018
Category:
General fiction (Children's / Teenage)
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
28-09-2021
Publisher:
Text Publishing
Country of origin:
Australia
Pages:
304
Kay Kerr

Kay Kerr is a former journalist and community newspaper editor from Brisbane, now living on the Sunshine Coast with her husband and daughter and working as a freelance writer.

Kay was writing the first draft of Please Don't Hug Me, her first book, when she received her own autism-spectrum diagnosis

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Reviews

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1 Review

Social Queue is the second novel by Australian author, Kay Kerr. Eighteen-year-old Zoe Kelly is one of three interns at Bubble, a website featuring news and pop culture, and has so far written horoscopes and compiled the events calendar. But, after some rather unsatisfactory experiences with online dating apps, she has written an article about navigating modern romance.

Zoe is autistic, something that attracted relentless bullying during high school, and her difficulty with reading social cues means that her dating history is non-existent. She is navigating the newness of her internship and her first year of Uni, studying Journalism, and her article is funny and candid. Apart from the inevitable negative or abusive comments, the reaction is mostly encouraging and enthusiastic, particularly from other autistic women, who appreciate Zoe’s perspective.

What is most surprising are five comments indicating that in her recent past there may have been potential for dates of which she was unaware. Her editor suggests that further articles might expand on the theme if Zoe is willing to connect with these five and explore any signs of attraction she may have missed, and why.

Of the five, she is most apprehensive about meeting with the high school bully; with the Uni classmate, the co-worker in her vacation job and the high school classmate with anxiety problems, Zoe is still nervous, but they present less of a problem; the one she can virtually dismiss immediately is the twin brother of her currently-absent best friend, who confesses to a Year Seven crush.

Zoe is lucky to have plenty of support: her parents are understanding; her extroverted sister, Harriet is a font of information about both clothing and interpreting social cues; her best friend is generous with long-distance advice; her boss is ready to accommodate her needs; and her senior colleague takes a bit of a mentoring role which turns reciprocal. All of that means she can write about each encounter with honesty and often humour.

Kerr’s characters are mostly appealing, and certainly realistic. Being autistic herself naturally gives authenticity to all of Zoe’s thoughts, feelings and reactions, and gives the neurotypical reader valuable insight into the world of an autistic person. Kerr also highlights the need for better training of police to deal with the neuro-diverse population, and the media for reporting on this population, and the disabled generally, in a non-offensive manner. Kerr’s second novel is funny, insightful and thought-provoking.
This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by NetGalley and Text Publishing.

Contains Spoilers No
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