Trans mission : my quest to a beard /

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Bertie, Alex, 1995- author.
Edition:First U.S. edition.
Imprint:New York : Little, Brown and Company, 2019.
Description:296 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13288441
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780316529037
0316529036
9780316490337
9780316490344
Notes:"Originally published in 2017 by Wren & Rook in Great Britain"--Title verso.
Summary:"A brave firsthand account of author Alex Bertie's life, struggles, and victories as a transgender teen, and a guide for transitioning teens"--
Target Audience:Ages 12 and up.
Review by Booklist Review

Twenty-year-old Bertie is a British transgender man and well-known YouTube presence whose first book is a combination memoir and guide to all (well, almost) things transgender. Bertie began posting videos to his public YouTube channel in his early teens, and as he first came out as a lesbian at age 13 and then as a transgender man at 16, the channel became devoted to sexuality and gender identity. While Bertie doesn't claim to be an expert, he draws on his own personal experience and significant research to offer this accessible, common sense guide featuring such things as dysphoria, chest binding (which he says saved his life), chest surgery, testosterone treatment, and much more. Especially notable is his advocacy for the internet and social media, both of which provided him not only essential information but also a community of like-minded individuals who understood his evolving experience as a trans man. While aimed at teens, his book includes a long, adultcentric chapter written by his mother about being the parent of a trans child. Throughout Bertie is an affable, conscientious, and informed guide who writes well and gives his readers an invaluable, potentially life-changing and -saving book. It is highly recommended.--Michael Cart Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Blending autobiography and guidebook in his debut, trans man and popular YouTuber Bertie shares pivotal moments from his life and transition to illuminate a variety of topics relevant to female-to-male transition, including coming out, name selection, chest binding, hormone treatments, gender confirmation surgeries, dating and intimacy, and disclosing gender identity in the workplace. Bertie openly confronts the difficulties of pursuing transition on a personal and societal level--including his own history with depression, dysphoria, and self-harming behavior--while taking care to stress the joy he found in his own transition. He also acknowledges the limits of his perspective, sticking to trans topics with which he has personal experience and recognizing his own privilege as a "white, educated male with family support, a roof over my head, and a job" and as a resident of the United Kingdom, where transition is covered by health care rather than the patient. Aimed at teens beginning their transition or for those questioning how they identify, as well as at the people who love them, Bertie serves as a relatable narrator who encourages his readers to do what they "need to do to be happy" without ignoring the barriers they may face. Agent: Silvia Molteni, Peters Fraser and Dunlop. Ages 12--up. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 7 Up--YouTuber Bertie combines practical advice for other young transgender readers with a memoir about his own transition. The text is accompanied by humorous line drawings by the author and includes family anecdotes and terms like "transliness." The overall tone is personal, straightforward, and upbeat. Bertie frankly acknowledges the pain of gender dysphoria and his difficult road to family acceptance and access to medical care for his transition. Responsibly, Bertie omits the details of his period of self-harm and emphasizes the importance of finding support, whether that's from family, friends, mental health professionals, or online communities. Readers get to know Bertie and his family through intimate details like his trans coming-out letter to his dad, a Q&A chapter with his mom aimed at other parents of transgender youth, and a recounting of how his parents took care of him during top surgery recovery. Other chapters are more how-to, covering topics from packing (putting something in one's underwear to give the appearance of a bulge) to safer sex and self-esteem. The back matter includes a glossary and a brief list of resources, with many other citations in the body of the text (including sources for, and reviews of, particular types and brands of chest binders). VERDICT An accessible, hopeful road map for youth in transition and their friends, families, and communities.--Sarah Stone, San Francisco Public Library

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A YA addition to the long-standing genre of trans memoir."I'm not really a writer," explains Bertie, the 23-year-old YouTuber-turned-author, "but I have had some different experiences that I'd really like the world to know about." In chapters like "Chest Binding" and "Bottom Surgery," Bertie repackages generations of information developed and shared by transmasculine people, with some contemporary additions. Given that it's also memoir, he narrowly focuses on a fairly privileged white trans male experience with chatty prose in distractingly laid out text. Bertie sticks to fairly basic information around medical and social transition in addition to his personal experiences. Early on he remarks that "the area I lived in until I was five was not a nice place. I can't imagine the kind of person I'd be today if I had grown up there. Would I ever have had the confidence to transition?" This may alienate readers, both trans and cis, from stigmatized backgrounds. In the chapter "Dating While Trans," he acknowledges that he doesn't know "what life would be like if I were a single trans man navigating the world of dating," which calls into question the value of his advice.Readers who want to see their specific experience reflected in a book and those fascinated by prosaic trans narratives will be satisfied by this text, though its lasting value is otherwise limited. (Memoir. 13-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review


Review by Publisher's Weekly Review


Review by School Library Journal Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review