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Confessions of a Teenage Hermaphrodite Paperback – September 18, 2012
| Lianne Simon (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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Jameson can be like other boys after minor surgery and a few years on testosterone Well, at least that's what his parents always say. But Jamie sees an elfin princess in the mirror, and male hormones would only ruin her pretty face. For him to become the man his parents expect, Jameson must leave behind the hopes and dreams of a little girl. But what is so wrong with Jamie's dreams that they can't be her life?
- Print length243 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateSeptember 18, 2012
- Dimensions6 x 0.61 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100985148209
- ISBN-13978-0985148201
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Simon takes great care with her writing and the result is a gentle novel about a strong girl" - Christi The Teen Librarian
"Read this book!! It's awesomely unique, you have never read anything like it before and it's just wonderful." - Lost In A Y.A. Wonderland
"You'll enjoy this book and, at the same time, you'll learn a great deal about these marginalized members of our society" - Shelly's LGBT Book Review Blog
"Lianne is a master at weaving this tale." - Jesse Kimmel-Freeman
From the Back Cover
About the Author
Tiny and frail, Lianne struggled physically, but excelled at her studies. In 1970, she was awarded a scholarship to the University of Miami, from which she graduated in 1973. Fond memories of her time there remain with her.
Some years later, after living in several states, and spending time abroad, Lianne settled in to the suburbs north of Atlanta, where she now lives with her husband and their cat.
While seeking answers to her own genetic anomalies, Lianne met a family whose daughter was born with one testis and one ovary. As a result of that encounter, she spent more than a decade answering inquiries on behalf of a support group for the parents of such children.
Product details
- Publisher : Faie Miss (September 18, 2012)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 243 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0985148209
- ISBN-13 : 978-0985148201
- Item Weight : 12.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.61 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,409,979 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,746 in LGBTQ+ Biographies (Books)
- #19,606 in Coming of Age Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Lianne Simon's father was a dairy farmer turned engineer, her mother a nurse. She grew up in a home filled with love and good books. As a child, Lianne was tiny--at nine she was the same size as her six-year-old sister. Although frail, she did well in her studies and was eventually awarded a scholarship. Today Lianne and her husband live in the suburbs outside Atlanta, Georgia in the U.S.
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Jamie is a child who is loyal to a fault to her loved ones, but eventually realizes she can no longer sacrifice her life and happiness for the sake of others. She struggles mightily and unsuccessfully throughout the novel to be the son her family wants her to be. The fact that they are devoutly Christian is very much like a double edge sword for Jamie. On the one hand, they are all bound by an innocence and devotion to the faith that has gotten them through some very difficult times, including the death of a child killed in Vietnam. On the other, the parents' literalist and fundamentalist interpretation of the Scriptures is part of what is preventing Jamie from being her true self.
My take on this book is that it fits more into a category of a "coming to terms" tale rather than it being a "coming of age" story. There is a fine distinction between the two. I say this because Jamie, who with a little help from her friends eventually summons the strength and assertiveness to fend off her well-meaning father and, like Dorothy in the "Wizard of Oz," realizes she has always had the power to go back home and be the girl she was meant to be.
She's 16. She's away at college. She starts living as a girl. Dad gets mad. She's 18 - still living as a girl and still not at home. She wants to marry and adopt a couple of orphans, but her dad still thinks she needs to come home and go into some kind of gender therapy and become a boy. Then everything gets resolved and she lives happily ever after.
Like I said, I wanted this book to be good. But the narration switches from first person to third person frequently, so I never felt like I was truly inside Jamie's head. And I got SO frustrated at her insistence on obeying her parents even when she was an adult and not even living with them - she knew she was a girl, the doctor agreed she was a girl, so why did she keep trying to be a boy for her dad? Argh.
I guess I wanted to be in Jamie's head more, and I wanted her to have a backbone. Better luck next time.
It is a book that is very hard to put down.
Top reviews from other countries
I wouldn't ever recommend it to anyone






