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Where the Map Ends
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233581854
- EAN9798233581854
- Date de parution17/02/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
In a small Nebraska town in the 1950s, Danny Carter learns early that there is only one "right" way to be-and that whatever is true inside him must be kept quiet. Then Ben Laughlin arrives, and friendship becomes the one place Danny can breathe. What begins as boyhood loyalty deepens into something neither of them has language for, something tender and dangerous in a world that punishes difference.
When Danny leaves for the University of California, Berkeley in 1968, the country is breaking open-assassinations, Vietnam, protests, and a youth culture that refuses to whisper. Berkeley is overwhelming, electric, and full of firsts: new ideas, new kinds of people, and the first crack in the shame Danny has carried for as long as he can remember. But freedom has its costs. Back home, Ben is pulled into the machinery of expectations and war, and Danny is left holding letters that feel like lifelines across a widening distance-letters that carry longing, terror, and everything they still cannot say out loud. In California, Danny begins the slow, courageous work of becoming real.
He finds forbidden books that name what he's felt in secret. He finds rooms where laughter is loud and fear is shared, and a community that helps him trade invisibility for survival. And he finds Lavender Pages, a queer bookstore that becomes more than a place-it becomes a home, a chosen family, and the doorway to his own voice. Where the Map Ends is a sweeping coming-of-age novel about growing up gay in conservative America and crossing the invisible border between the life you were handed and the life you choose.
It's a story of first love that doesn't resolve neatly, of friendships that shape the spine, of the ache of leaving, and the holy relief of finally being seen. Decades later, with a life built in the open and love steady at his side, Danny looks back at the terrified boy he once was-and understands that some endings are the truest beginnings.
When Danny leaves for the University of California, Berkeley in 1968, the country is breaking open-assassinations, Vietnam, protests, and a youth culture that refuses to whisper. Berkeley is overwhelming, electric, and full of firsts: new ideas, new kinds of people, and the first crack in the shame Danny has carried for as long as he can remember. But freedom has its costs. Back home, Ben is pulled into the machinery of expectations and war, and Danny is left holding letters that feel like lifelines across a widening distance-letters that carry longing, terror, and everything they still cannot say out loud. In California, Danny begins the slow, courageous work of becoming real.
He finds forbidden books that name what he's felt in secret. He finds rooms where laughter is loud and fear is shared, and a community that helps him trade invisibility for survival. And he finds Lavender Pages, a queer bookstore that becomes more than a place-it becomes a home, a chosen family, and the doorway to his own voice. Where the Map Ends is a sweeping coming-of-age novel about growing up gay in conservative America and crossing the invisible border between the life you were handed and the life you choose.
It's a story of first love that doesn't resolve neatly, of friendships that shape the spine, of the ache of leaving, and the holy relief of finally being seen. Decades later, with a life built in the open and love steady at his side, Danny looks back at the terrified boy he once was-and understands that some endings are the truest beginnings.





















