Poignant. . . this is an important addition to the small field of books featuring an intersex character.” School Library Journal
Informative without being either dry or sensationalistic . . . . This necessary story is warmly told.” Kirkus Reviews
Birdsall doesn’t shy away from the complexity of Alyx’s condition . . . creating an unconventional character with whom teens can relate [sic].” Booklist
Birdsall demonstrates a remarkable talent for original storytelling . . . . As thoughtful and thought-provoking as it is solidly entertaining from beginning to end, Double Exposure is very highly recommended.” Midwest Book Review/Reviewer’s Bookwatch
[Double Exposure] is as valuable for its portrayal of the effects of bullying as for its insights into the experience of being intersex. It belongs in any collection that serves teen readers.” ALA’s Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Round Table/GLBT Reviews
Heart wrenching . . . . the powerful coming-of-age novel reflects the triumph of acceptance and equality with the help of unconditional love and support. A simply stunning yet stimulating work of art.” Planet London
A slam dunk” Wisconsin Gazette
A novel that takes you into the heart of a character and makes you root for her until the very end.” Teaching Tolerance
Double Exposure is a poignant, gut-punch of a novel, timely, and full of flashes of dark wit . . . Highly recommended for LGBTQ teens and allies alike. I adored this book!” Jenn Crowell, author of Necessary Madness
Goes above and beyond the ordinary . . . . recommended for anyone who enjoys well-written, timely YA.” Out in Print
"Double Exposure gives the reader double what most novels do, portraying characters that are both bold and tender, raising questions that make you both think and feel deeply, and transporting you into a story that both entertains and inspires. Double thumbs up from me!" Alex Sanchez, author of Rainbow Boys and Boyfriends with Girlfriends
Told in clear, straightforward prose, this riveting story of Alyx, and the gauntlet she has to run in order to discover who she truly is, shines a brilliant light on the truth that we are all queer in some way. All of us. In Double Exposure, Bridget Birdsall has given us a story that is courageous, intense and full of heart. It’s a score from the outside, and everyone who reads it wins!” Kathi Appelt, author of the Newberry Honor winner The Underneath, Keeper, and The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp
"Double Exposure is an important book, the kind that just might save a teen’s life. Alyx captured my heart on page one and never let it go. All Alyx wants is to be herself. Which is what any teen wants. And all teens deserve. Bridget Birdsall has done a wonderful job of capturing a teen’s longing, anguish, courage, and determination. Read this book. It will break your heartand heal it." Lesléa Newman, author of October Mourning: A song for Matthew Shepard
This powerful coming of age story is refreshingly unique, yet wonderfully universal in its portrayal of what it means to be different. With both realism and sensitivity, Bridget Birdsall depicts the tremendous courage required for Alyx to be true to herself. Double Exposure is a triumphant novel about friendship and self-acceptance.” Yvonne Ventresca, author of Pandemic
Double Exposure is an important story, poignant and compelling. And it’s a great basketball story as well, rising out of a deep knowledge of the sport. Bridget Birdsall is a writer to watch!” Marion Dane Bauer, Newbery Honor-winning author of On My Honor
Intersexuality got the highbrow treatment in Jeffrey Eugenides’ Middlesex, but when it comes to educating the masses, some may want a newer, well-written teenage story such as . . . Bridget Birdsall’s Double Exposure.”
OZY
Poignant. . . this is an important addition to the small field of books featuring an intersex character.” School Library Journal
Informative without being either dry or sensationalistic . . . . This necessary story is warmly told.” Kirkus Reviews
Birdsall doesn’t shy away from the complexity of Alyx’s condition . . . creating an unconventional character with whom teens can relate [sic].” Booklist
Birdsall demonstrates a remarkable talent for original storytelling . . . . As thoughtful and thought-provoking as it is solidly entertaining from beginning to end, Double Exposure is very highly recommended.” Midwest Book Review/Reviewer’s Bookwatch
[Double Exposure] is as valuable for its portrayal of the effects of bullying as for its insights into the experience of being intersex. It belongs in any collection that serves teen readers.” ALA’s Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Round Table/GLBT Reviews
Heart wrenching . . . . the powerful coming-of-age novel reflects the triumph of acceptance and equality with the help of unconditional love and support. A simply stunning yet stimulating work of art.” Planet London
A slam dunk” Wisconsin Gazette
A novel that takes you into the heart of a character and makes you root for her until the very end.” Teaching Tolerance
Double Exposure is a poignant, gut-punch of a novel, timely, and full of flashes of dark wit . . . Highly recommended for LGBTQ teens and allies alike. I adored this book!” Jenn Crowell, author of Necessary Madness
Goes above and beyond the ordinary . . . . recommended for anyone who enjoys well-written, timely YA.” Out in Print
"Double Exposure gives the reader double what most novels do, portraying characters that are both bold and tender, raising questions that make you both think and feel deeply, and transporting you into a story that both entertains and inspires. Double thumbs up from me!" Alex Sanchez, author of Rainbow Boys and Boyfriends with Girlfriends
Told in clear, straightforward prose, this riveting story of Alyx, and the gauntlet she has to run in order to discover who she truly is, shines a brilliant light on the truth that we are all queer in some way. All of us. In Double Exposure, Bridget Birdsall has given us a story that is courageous, intense and full of heart. It’s a score from the outside, and everyone who reads it wins!” Kathi Appelt, author of the Newberry Honor winner The Underneath, Keeper, and The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp
"Double Exposure is an important book, the kind that just might save a teen’s life. Alyx captured my heart on page one and never let it go. All Alyx wants is to be herself. Which is what any teen wants. And all teens deserve. Bridget Birdsall has done a wonderful job of capturing a teen’s longing, anguish, courage, and determination. Read this book. It will break your heartand heal it." Lesléa Newman, author of October Mourning: A song for Matthew Shepard
This powerful coming of age story is refreshingly unique, yet wonderfully universal in its portrayal of what it means to be different. With both realism and sensitivity, Bridget Birdsall depicts the tremendous courage required for Alyx to be true to herself. Double Exposure is a triumphant novel about friendship and self-acceptance.” Yvonne Ventresca, author of Pandemic
Double Exposure is an important story, poignant and compelling. And it’s a great basketball story as well, rising out of a deep knowledge of the sport. Bridget Birdsall is a writer to watch!” Marion Dane Bauer, Newbery Honor-winning author of On My Honor
Intersexuality got the highbrow treatment in Jeffrey Eugenides’ Middlesex, but when it comes to educating the masses, some may want a newer, well-written teenage story such as . . . Bridget Birdsall’s Double Exposure.”
OZY
10/01/2014
Gr 9 Up—After Alyx is attacked by the school bully, her mother decides they need a fresh start, and Alyx is ready. Born with ambiguous genitalia, Alyx has lived her life as a boy, but knows that her true identity is a girl. Her parents chose to do nothing when Alyx was a baby, not wanting to choose her identity for her. A move to Wisconsin gives her the opportunity to be her true self, a complicated undertaking. Patti, nicknamed "Pepper" because of her hotheadedness, befriends the young woman and encourages her to join the basketball team but quickly starts bullying the teen. When Alyx's identity is called into question, her past comes to light and threatens her basketball eligibility. Though the writing sometimes feels stilted and the story not always believable, the protagonist's feelings and conversations about her identity are poignant. She debates which locker room to use and uses words such as gender fluid, intersex, and genderqueer when she thinks about herself. At her lowest times, she feels neither male nor female or maybe both or like a mutant. Information about doctor's reports, reconstructive surgery, and the way people have treated her provides a complex look at what Alyx has faced and what is ahead. Though the ending feels too tidy, this is an important addition to the small field of books featuring an intersex character.—Amanda MacGregor, formerly at Apollo High School Library, St. Cloud, MN
2014-07-22
Alyx, an intersex teen, leaves California for Milwaukee to live as a girl for the first time. After being bullied by vicious Ricky "Prickman" and his crew for being a "faggot," Alyx and her mom decide she needs a fresh start. With a new last name and a new set of pronouns, Alyx moves with her mother to her grandpa and uncle Joe's Midwestern home. Tall and a lover of basketball, Alyx becomes quick friends with her school's varsity team, including pushy and dangerously hot-tempered Patti "Pepper" Pitmani. Background information about intersex conditions and Alyx's own experience of her body are woven easily into the text, informative without being either dry or sensationalistic. If anything, the author errs toward telling readers too little. Without much discussion of Alyx's sexual orientation, it is difficult to tell on what level slurs like "faggot" and "dyke" affect her. Similarly, Alyx's teammates and school authority figures' responses to her history being revealed are almost distractingly understated: Given Alyx's fears, the insistence that Milwaukee is a conservative town, and the national reality of gender-based bullying, having only one or two straw-man characters approach Alyx with any hostility comes across as both anticlimactic and difficult to believe. This necessary story is warmly told but occasionally feels incomplete. (Fiction. 14-18)