![]() ![]() What I enjoyed most about this book was its writing style. Clare and Audrey both feel alone and misunderstood, but maybe their friendship will save them both. When searching online, they find the term, “gender-fluid,” which makes more sense than anything else so far. Meanwhile, Clare is struggling with their gender identity, wondering what it means that some days they wake up feeling more like a boy than a girl. The only path she sees forward is changing who she is completely, so that she can match who the world wants her to be. Audrey is desperately tired of being treated differently because of her neurodiversity. When he died, it severed the last ties between the twins, leaving them adrift in their own worlds. The only thing they seem to have in common is the grief they are experiencing after their brother’s sudden death. They don’t attend the same school, don’t live in the same room, and they definitely don’t understand each other. I received an advanced copy of Under Shifting Stars from NetGalley, so that I could share my review with you! Audrey and Clare might be twins, but they share very little. ![]()
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