The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Linus Giese: "I am Linus" offers refreshing honesty and insight into identity diversity

2023-04-11T08:59:23.033Z


Your own identity is something valuable. Especially when you can't be yourself until you're 31. Linus Giese is a trans man - he tells his story.


Your own identity is something valuable.

Especially when you can't be yourself until you're 31.

Linus Giese is a trans man - he tells his story.

Note to our readers:

If you make a purchase via the links included, we receive a commission from the partners.

This changes nothing for you.

Imagine buying a coffee and being asked for your name to write on the mug.

This is nothing special for many people.

For Linus, however, it is a key experience.

It's the moment he uses his real name for the first time.

recognizable to other people.

From there begins a journey to yourself that may never be complete.

Linus tells part of the journey in the book "I am Linus - How I became the man I have always been" (promotional link).

Linus Giese "I am Linus": About the book

Girls play with dolls, while boys play football – a striking and not entirely serious example of gender clichés.

However, they are still in the minds of some people.

People who are different stand out.

You don't belong.

You pretend.

Sometimes they become visible.

Just like Linus.

In the book "I am Linus" Linus tells his life story, how he became the person he always was.

Childhood memories and traumas are told, but also gaining knowledge and hurdles on his way to becoming a trans man.

Stay up to date on new publications and book tips with the free newsletter from our partner 24books.de.

In over 30 chapters, Linus tells episodes from his life and lets readers get close to him.

It's about many opposites, courage and fear, self-doubt and a new start.

But also about the name change and political aspects that are difficult for some trans people to overcome.

There was also hostility and threats that Linus experienced on various social media channels.

In some cases, he culminated in hatred on his own doorstep.

Another major issue is acceptance, generally in society, but above all in the workplace.

How does society deal with trans people - which values ​​do we want to stand for?

It becomes clear that there is a gap between the desired and the actual situation.

A sentence that sounds like a matter of course - "I am Linus" - but he divides his life into a before and an after.

In an impressive way, Linus Giese tells why he had to be thirty-one years old to say out loud that he is a man and trans and why his life may not be easier today, but it is much happier.

Blurb / Rowohlt Polaris

Ten books to read to your kids

David McKee "Elmar": Elmar is anything but grey.

Colorful and different.

A book about colors and the differences that make us who we are.

Wonderful!

© Thienemann

Axel Scheffler, Julia Donaldson "The Ugly Five": wildebeest, hyena, vulture, warthog and marabou are rather the outsiders of the savannah.

But this book shows that they can be the real heroes.

External appearances don't matter.

© Beltz

Rachel Bright, Jim Field "The squirrels": The fight over a nut - one collects, one eats immediately.

Quarrels are inevitable.

How is a dispute resolved?

Magical!

©magellan

Werner Holzwarth, Wolf Erlbruch “From the little mole who wanted to know who hit his head”: children have everything they love.

The perfect book to read!

© Peter Hammer Verlag

Cover for "There's still room for dogs and cats" by Axel Scheffler and Julia DonaldsonAxel Scheffler, Julia Donaldson "There's still room for dogs and cats" – Even if Axel Scheffler published a classic with "The Gruffalo", this is no less worth reading.

A book about friendship.

© Beltz

Cover of Eric Carle's The Very Hungry CaterpillarEric Carle's The Very Hungry Caterpillar: one of the classic read-aloud books.

Of course, this one should not be missing in the collection.

© Gerstenberg

Cover of the join-in book by Jörg Mühle "Just scratch your ears for a moment"Jörg Mühle "Just scratch your ears for a moment" - the perfect join-in book for the evening ritual: brush your teeth, shake your pillow... and sink into the realm of dreams.

© Moritz Verlag

Cover of the book "Das NEINhorn" by Marc-Uew Kling and Astrid HennMarc-Uwe Kling, Astrid Henn "Das NEINhorn": Who doesn't know their favorite word "No".

A book that can become the favorite book of the young target group.

Instead of "no" a "again".

©Carlsen

Cover of the book "Gib mir mal der Hautcolor"Olaolu Fajembola/Tebogo Nimindé-Dundadengar: "Gib mir mal der Hautcolour" - reading aloud also serves to convey values.

It can increase understanding of important issues.

© Beltz

Cover of the fairy tale book "Fairy Tales for All" "Fairy Tales for All": Classic fairy tales are relatively timeless and are just as popular with children today as they were probably with you when you were a child.

© Dorling-Kindersley

Are you interested in children's and youth books?

Here is a selection that the Academy for Children's Literature recommends.

Linus Giese "I am Linus": The conclusion

The book was a lesson for me and let me immerse myself in the world of trans people.

Using the example of 'Linus', of course.

I was immediately drawn into the book and was able to experience the different emotions.

Linus Giese tells his story so openly, bravely and excitingly that you can hardly put the book down, I don't say it often, but: Listen to this man.

Margarete Stokowksi, blurb/Rowohl Polaris

Courageous - yes, that's what Linus Giese is for me too - he himself doesn't find the word particularly appropriate, as he said at a reading in Munich in early March, but I think it applies anyway.

Opening yourself like this when there is a headwind is powerful.


"I am Linus" is political, approachable, entertaining and worth reading.

Even if there are repetitions and contradictions.

Do you find books that deal with identities exciting?

Then "Blood Book" (promotional link) by Kim de l'Horizon might be something for you.

Kim de l'Horizon received the Book Prize 2022 for this - for the first time the prize went to a gender-appropriate book.

Linus Giese "I am Linus"

2020 Rowohlt Verlag, ISBN: 978-3-499-00312-7

Price: Paperback 15.00 euros, e-book 9.99 euros, 224 pages (deviating from the format)

Order here!

Linus Giese

Linus Giese was born in Bremen in 1986.

He is a Germanist and works as a blogger, journalist and bookseller in Berlin.

He writes about books and about his transition.

He has written several texts for the Tagesspiegel

and the

Taz,

among others

.

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2023-04-11

Similar news:

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.