Cover Image: Be Straight with Me

Be Straight with Me

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Member Reviews

Emily and Max meet in College. Emily is a straight female and Max is gay man. The fall in love and fall in friendship. These poems explore all the ups and downs of their relationship and what it means to fall in love without regard to gender. Enjoy their poetical love story

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This memoir-in-verse shares the story of college life and all of the experiences of becoming who you are and who you're going to be. It's a story of love and of friendship and living those moments that seem ordinary, but really mean everything.

One thing that is striking about this book that comes across beautifully is the realization that sometimes you are in the midst of a love story that you didn't expect, but it's still real. It's love. And it matters.

BE STRAIGHT WITH ME had me all up in my feelings because it also tells the story of a friendship that's lost when the love is no longer shared.

Before I even finished reading the review copy of BE STRAIGHT WITH ME, I knew this was a book that I had to add to my personal library. It really touched my heart.

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Beautifully told in verse and engaging story. I truly enjoyed this and would highly recommend it to anyone interested in poetry, coming of age or LGBTQ+ stories. .

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this collection of poetry couldn't keep my interest. I was quite bored and I did not like it at all. I was not a fan

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I received a free copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

I love a memoir told in verse. I really enjoyed the main theme of Emily falling in love with her gay best friend and how that is explored.
The poetic nature of the writing evokes so much emotion. I loved the deep exploration of sexuality by showing that sexuality doesn't define everything in your life especially happiness.

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This is one of my favorite books of 2020. Nothing has torn at my heart strings recently like this did. Emily and Max's relationship is so intriguing, and was told so raw.

I received an advanced reader copy of this book to read in exchange for an honest review via netgalley.

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This is a book that I could not get into. I think it was how it was written. I just never got to connect with the story so in the end, I had to just stop reading it after a while.

I think this book has an audience but it just is not for me.

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Poetic Journey of a Straight Woman falling in love with her Gay Best Friend, told in verse. I loved this deeply heartfelt story of a straight woman and her gay best friend falling in love. The book journeys through a woman's identity growing up and how the boys/men in her life impacted her. The poems and chapters were relatable and provided a bit of nostalgia. The story is painful and beautiful and so well told. Thank you for NetGalley for the copy.

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Emily's book is one of my favourite till date published by AMU. It has a unique vibe and theme. I especially lover the memoir like theme how the book proceeds.

The poems in the book are sharp and heart touching that they almost get you in the situation.

I definitely recommend this book

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"Some of the most beautiful
things in life come
from mistakes."

Thank you Andrews McMeel for providing me with an e-arc through NetGalley.

I cannot stress enough about how much I love this book! There is a reason why Andrews McMeel has taken a permanent place in my heart and that is because of their very keen talent to pick the most unique flair out of all the poets/poetesses! Rarely do I come across works that don't work out for me.
I knew this book is going to be a 5 star read the moment I started it. I never decide what rating a book is going to get but the moment I started this one I just knew it. And when I read the last line of this book, I will give this an infinite number of stars if I can...

During her sophomore year at Middlebury College, Emily meets Max—“you” as she intimately refers to him in the book. Not exactly a tomboy, but not quite a girly girl either, Emily is intent on finding a masculine boyfriend to assuage a deeply rooted fear that she may not be quite feminine enough.
Max—a boisterous class clown beloved by his many straight guy friends—has recently come out as gay and is embracing his newly claimed identity. Initially, Max and Emily dislike each other, but end up growing close after a make-out dare on Halloween. Then one night, Max reveals an unexpected physical attraction that catches them both by surprise. The relationship begins, playfully and in secret, and then spirals into something more.
Max and Emily’s journey takes many forms—they experiment with drugs; they travel abroad; they try sleeping with other people (together), and everything in between—all in the name of “this bizarre, beautiful thing” they call love.

As a strikingly soul-stirring memoir-in-verse, 'Be Straight With Me' explores a nonconforming love that blurs the lines of sexuality and gender - an enduring true story by a straight-woman, portrayed in the most poignantly haunting way by bringing into the light of the consequences of a romance as such.
I am never someone who reads blurbs before reading a book. "I have read it before and it is on my TBR because I liked the blurb when I checked it out first," is something I stand on. But when it comes to this arc, it began with the blurb, reminding me what this is about and grabbing my attention because:
Yes, this is a story I want to explore.
Yes, this is a story I want to know more about THROUGH poetry.
The moment I began reading this, I couldn't stop. Even though usually poetry reads are quick and gets finished in one sitting, this one just had to be set down at some points because it became quite emotionally overwhelming for me.

Memoir-in-verse is something that is very hard to nail and Emily has done more than just nail it with her unabashed honesty in her brutally authentic expression of a part of her life story. It is really hard for me to connect personally with memoir poetry unless the imagery is equally focussed on the emotions and the thought processes along with the experience. Or else, it would be nothing but prose. That is not the case with Emily as she weaves her story with poetry in a hypnotising way: transporting you to her world and making you experience it vividly. The intimate look into her experience, with her poetry style, leaves an everlasting impression.

It remains a mystery on why I connected this to this the way I did but I am more than just grateful that I did! One can wonder if it is because we all fall in love with a wrong person and if it is because it is a story of survival, healing, acceptance, coming in terms with who you are, self-love and so much more. But it is so much more than just that. It is a beautiful expression of everything in the spectrum of emotions.
This is something that needs to be held between your hands and experienced. This is a story you need to listen to.
This is the book that needs to be one amidst your exalted collection because it is mine and it will forever be.

I have never had more urge to explore more works by the author so whatever Emily will be putting out next, I am grabbing it! She just became one of my favourites and I am sure she will be yours too!

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“Be Straight With Me” (2020): is a rare and intriguing debut memoir of collected poetic verse, where author Emily E. Dalton explores her alternative relationship with her charismatic gay male best friend, *Max Willard. This unconventional coming -of-age narration began at Middlebury College, Vermont - and spanned over time to mature adulthood. In addition to her writing, Emily Dalton works part-time as a blacksmith’s apprentice, and lives in Connecticut.

In the opening poem: “Sophomore September” Emily encountered Max and his entourage of devoted friends. Max had already decided Emily was “a snarly bitch” and while visiting her dorm room, stole a twenty dollar bill off her desk! In the next poem, Emily recalled impressions formed in childhood/youth, which is a sequence somewhat followed throughout the book-- how past experiences might influence current thoughts and actions.
The atmosphere among the college students was like a boisterous frat party. Emily was surprised to learn that Max was jilted after a brief affair with a male reality TV star. Max seemed quite happy to hang out watch videos with her roommate Joanna: in “Friends By Default”. Eventually, in “Joanna Gets A Boyfriend”- she moved out of their dorm room, and Max decided to sleep near Emily in Joanna’s empty bed.
Predictably, the friendship dynamic between Emily and Max would intensify and deepen as they became closer, Emily would write: “I’m having trouble determining whether/you fascinate me because I’m scared of you/or I’m scared of you because you fascinate me.”
“Over Christmas Break” Max met Emily’s family when they drove to Boston for the holiday's. Max was always charming and funny, everyone really enjoyed his company. Together, they almost appeared like a young straight couple. In the poems: “Max and Emily World” - “Later That Night”- they discovered and found each other in completely unexpected ways.

It is true that single gay men rarely have sexually intimate relationships with women. Max didn’t have to act or pretend that he was straight or bisexual either; Emily truly loved and accepted him just as he was. When Emily and Max moved to study abroad, she in Prague and he in Berlin, the distance and closeness of their relationship pattern began to shift, yet again, as they evolved further to establish their places in the world. Readers will not want to miss this unusual and unique memoir; this collection may likely become a reference for further study. Great cover, too! (*) Name changed for privacy concerns. ~ With thanks to Andrews McMeel Publishing via NetGalley for advance notification of this title.

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A beautiful memoir uniquely told in verse.Falling deeply in love with someone who due to their own sexuality can’t love you back.Emotional heart wrenching.#netgalley #bestraightwithme

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be Straight with Me by Emily Dalton is a great reflection and memoir to add to your shelves!

I love picking up the odd memoir, because people have such cool stories to tell! Emily Dalton is one of those special people that has a great story and a great voice for it.

This memoir is presented in an interesting fashion - kind of like poems in their odd style on the page. Despite me labeling them as "odd", I found it quite quirky and it made it all the more interesting! It's not the typical memoir, and I liked that! It spiced up my reading and had me very interested as to why the story was presented this way!

Emily falls in love with Max, but there's a wee problem - she's straight and he's gay. Unlucky as it is, this memoir presents it in such a lovely fashion. Just because that seems like such a black and white comment (you know, I put the word problem to make it seem that way), it really isn't. They can be in love but not have their sexuality define the joy they can bring each other. It's unique and lovely and gave me all of the feels! It brings hope and inspiration and makes me believe in love in more ways than ever before! There's also heart break and loss though, and you know... that hurt, but the descriptions of love... ahh. Yes, I like that.

Even so, it's more than just love. There's experimentation and other joys of life that come along to Emily. It's a coming of age story in it's own right. I just liked the love part, because I'm a sucker for that kind of thing.

Overall, I like this book! I think it's sweet and whimsical and magical and majestic. Emily is a great story teller too!

Four out of five stars.

Thank you to NetGalley and Andrew McMeel Publishing for providing me a free copy of this book in exchange of an honest review.

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I love how the author chose to write this memoir using poetry. I think that choice added a more romantic element to it. The author's changing relationship with the man that goes from her gay best friend to her lover and all of the emotions in between are captured beautifully in her writing.

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"When you answer,
I choke on air, realizing I've been
holding my breath
since I picked up the phone."

There were some awesome moments of entertainment in this book, like its punny title and a particularly new and different phrasing of everyone's favorite cliché sentence.

In all seriousness, though...

I've been reading a fair amount of free verse lately because I find I'm both fascinated and somewhat confused by the format. 'Confused' in the sense that I don't understand it quite as much as I would like to, and can't quite grasp yet why I feel that it sometimes works brilliantly and sometimes just fails. In this case, though, it worked; I honestly can't imagine the story having anywhere the same emotional impact if it had been written in prose. I felt the poetry flowed beautifully and heightened the entire narrative.

Form aside, though... what a story! This was such a captivating read, gripping like a piece of fiction but, at the same time, somehow uncomfortable to read knowing that real people had actually lived these events. And, sure, that could be said about any (auto-)biography, but the content of this particular book was so intimate that reading it felt almost voyeuristic at times. As a reader, I also interacted with it differently - I was more forgiving of the "characters" and had different expectations for the developments and the ending - than I would have done in a fiction book with the same "plot", which I found very interesting as well.

3.5 stars, rounded up.

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Thank you, NetGalley for an ARC for this book.

This book is a beautiful memoir told in verse. I don't read these kinds of poetry books, but I liked this one. It was written with perfection. This book talks about sexuality and how it's just not a mere black & white thing. This book deals with something we can relate to. Overall a nice book and would recommend it.

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‘Be Straight with Me’ by Emily Dalton is a memoir that is beautifully written in verse and digs into a topic that many can relate to - falling in love with someone who is equally perfect and wrong for you.

Emily and Max (not his real name) go to college together. Initially they do not get along but share the same friends. Until Emily’s roommate moves out of her dorm room and Max asks to sleep in the empty bed. A budding friendship is quickly formed and on the heels of that friendship, an attraction starts to build between them. The only confusing thing is, Emily is straight and Max is gay.

This is a story about how sexuality can be on a spectrum and how tough it can be to navigate through the struggle of figuring that out, whilst still learning how to be an adult in an unpredictable world. On an even deeper level, Dalton tackles how complicated love can be for anyone, especially those who my be confused about their sexuality. It feels as if she carefully and delicately chose each word to convey her thoughts and emotions during each of her experiences in life.

In short, this is a book for all of those who wish that simply loving someone meant that they would always love you in return.

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I received a complimentary early review copy of #BeStraightwithMe from #NetGalley

I think the underlying message contains many views and ideas that need to be shared, however I didn't enjoy the way things were presented in this book. The poetry style felt too much like "instagram poetry" (sentences that could form regular paragraphs, but printed with arbitrary line breaks as if that makes it poetry) and the overall writing just seemed very "young adult" or even targeted towards high school readers, not for adults.

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I received this ARC in exchange for an honest opinion on this poetic book by Emily E. Dalton. I thank NetGalley and Andrews McMeel Publishing for kindly providing me with this ARC.

Although this is not the usual genre I am used to reading, I decided to select this book because there is something in it and I should get out of my comfort zone and so it was!

In it, Emily, who is the main character herself, tells us about her sexual discovery and herself through experiences of various relationships, focusing on the main relationship that marked her as much as a woman as a person! The relationship that deserves the main focus is the one that she has with Max, a boy who assumes himself as a homosexual, but that throughout the book they keep more and more a strong loving connection. It is at that moment that the whole story unfolds, from her perspective, about this relationship and how it developed to the point of questioning what love is after all.

“I´m having trouble determining whether

you fascinate me because I´m scared of you

or I´m scared of you because you fascinate me”

Throughout the narrative, some moments go back and forth in time, in which we are faced with Emily’s childhood and then with her current moment, all in a way to dialogue her past with the moment. Emily wonders about everything, just as teenagers do, always looking for some logical explanation: what is love? what is my sexual preference? determination of sexual preference prevents us from loving each other? What she doesn’t understand is that these are questions that have no right answer, nor is there right or wrong!

During this journey, we will have contact with the various experiences she had, still within the discovering herself and others: with the use of drugs, alcohol, and the various relationships she maintained contact with. All the experiences made her build the whole being that Emily is now, as she admits was in the mistakes she learned about herself. And this is the big message I got from this reading!

It is important to note that this poetry book is not a usual loose compilation of poems, where various feelings are exposed, but rather a narrative that has a guiding thread from the beginning to the end of the story that Emily tells us. That way we can understand her entire journey and what it was like to learn and grow.

I enjoyed having this trip to Emily and Max´s world, it was such a genuine and touching history.

I recommend this book for all teenagers, because it is an accessible reading, without flourish and with dignified transparency that the author dared to have.

Good readings,

Next to a Book

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A beautifully honest memoir, dealt with beautifully. With tact and dignity. If you can get your hands on this do try. One of the best memoirs I've read in a long time.

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