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Woodworking

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: At least 6 months
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: At least 6 months

"Big-hearted and hilarious, an ode to authenticity and a must-read in our current times." —Shelby Van Pelt, New York Times bestselling author of Remarkably Bright Creatures
One of Them's 10 Most Anticipated Books of 2025

  • One of Book Riot's and The Mary Sue's 15 Most Anticipated Queer Books of 2025
  • One of The Millions', Kirkus's, The AV Club's, and LGBTQ Reads's Most Anticipated Books of 2025
  • One of BookBrowse's Most Anticipated Reads of March 2025
    An unforgettable and heartwarming book-club debut following a trans high school teacher from a small town in South Dakota who befriends the only other trans woman she knows: one of her students.
    Erica Skyberg is thirty-five years old, recently divorced—and trans. Not that she's told anyone yet. Mitchell, South Dakota, isn't exactly bursting with other trans women. Instead, she keeps to herself, teaching by day and directing community theater by night. That is, until Abigail Hawkes enters her orbit.
    Abigail is seventeen, Mitchell High's resident political dissident and Only Trans Girl. It's a role she plays faultlessly, albeit a little reluctantly. She's also annoyed by the idea of spending her senior year secretly guiding her English teacher through her transition. But Abigail remembers the uncertainty—and loneliness—that comes with it. Besides, Erica isn't the only one struggling to shed the weight of others' expectations.
    As their unlikely friendship evolves, it comes under the scrutiny of their community. And soon, both women—and those closest to them—are forced to ask: Who are we if we choose to hide ourselves? What happens once we disappear into the woodwork?
    Detransition Baby meets Fleishman is in Trouble in this remarkable debut novel from an incisive contemporary voice. A story about the awkwardness of growing up and the greatest love story of all, that between us and our friends, Woodworking is a tonic for the moment and a celebration of womanhood in all its multifaceted joy.

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      • Library Journal

        October 1, 2024

        St. James debuts with a story about Erica, a trans high school teacher who is 35 years old and lives in a small South Dakota town. One of her students, 17-year-old Abigail, is the only other trans person she knows. Their unlikely friendship powers the novel and both characters forward. Prepub Alert.

        Copyright 2024 Library Journal

        Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

      • Kirkus

        Starred review from January 15, 2025
        A trans teen helps her English teacher through the fraught process of coming out as transgender in small-town Mitchell, South Dakota. Thirty-five-year-old Erica Skyberg has always known she was a woman, despite the fact that she's still Mr. Skyberg to her high school students and, well, to everyone else. Her ex-wife, Connie, with whom Erica is still in love, is pregnant by her new Trump-supporting farmer boyfriend. It's only when 17-year-old Abigail Hawkes--spiky, foul-mouthed, outspokenly trans--transfers to Mitchell High that Erica has someone to tell her secret to. Abigail's got enough of her own problems and complications: parents who have kicked her out, a boyfriend whose rich conservative mom is bankrolling a state political campaign for a local transphobic preacher, and Abigail's own work as a volunteer for the preacher's Democratic rival. (The novel is set in the autumn preceding the 2016 election, which feels long enough ago in the timeline of transgender politics as to constitute historical fiction.) As the only trans person Erica knows, Abigail reluctantly becomes her sounding board, and Erica feels guilty leaning on her; they gradually grow close even as their relationship draws scrutiny and suspicion from the people around them. Alternating primarily between Erica's third-person chapters and Abigail's first-person ones, St. James contrasts Erica's attempts to be seen for who she really is with Abigail's thwarted desire for "woodworking," or disappearing into the woodwork to achieve the normalcy she thinks she so badly wants. ("I'll be hiding in the walls, trying to be any other girl, like in that one story with the yellow wallpaper," she vows.) St. James' plot moves like a Shakespeare comedy--some contrivances, yes, but all in the service of portraying the prismatic variations of the characters here, both cis and trans, who alternately fail themselves and each other, and work to rescue them back again. Pristinely characterized, this debut novel is by turns funny and heartrending.

        COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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