While Gabe's coming-out process figures heavily into the story, it is, refreshingly, only one aspect of his experience. There are dates failed and successful, a forcible outing, a heartfelt but refreshingly easy coming-out talk with John, and a pair of increasingly violent, threatening and genuinely scary enemies. When Gabe's radio show becomes an underground hit, generating a difficult-to-believe-but-pleasing-to-imagine cadre of fans calling themselves the Ugly Children Brigade, Gabe's B side is pushed further into public view. When the story opens, only a few people know about Gabe's B side the rest see him as a girl. Being trans, Gabe opines, is like being a 45 record with an A side and a B side. It is only after hearing Gabe's friend and neighbor John, a fellow music lover who worked as a DJ for forty years, use Gabe's birth name that readers learn that Gabe is transgender. Readers first meet Gabe as he DJs his first community-radio show, Beautiful Music for Ugly Children.
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