Photo:Sylvie Rosokoff;Courtesy of The Dial Press, an imprint of Random House

Sylvie Rosokoff;Courtesy of The Dial Press, an imprint of Random House
Courtesy of The Dial Press, an imprint of Random House

Just as You Arefollows a group of roommates who work at the fictional queer publicationNether Fields.Protagonist Liz Baker finds herself at odds with minority investor Daria Fitzgerald, who is working tirelessly to cut the company’s budget in half, and who also has many opinions about Liz’s writing. In familiar enemies-to-lovers fashion, Liz and Daria must find a way to work together, all while trying to ignore their own feelings for one another. The novel rings with unmistakable echoes of its inspiration,Pride & Prejudice, but Kellogg took the liberty of modernizing the original Jane Austen novel. Fancy balls became office parties, and the setting of rural England became a floundering New York City magazine.The novel, however, is much more than the typical romance or retelling. The author wanted to subvert expectations, specifically for the queer community. According to Kellog, one aspect of the book is about presenting different ideas of what certainty can look like. She allows her characters the freedom to explore their identities and find new beginnings later in life.Kellogg also heavily researched queer history while writing, and drew inspiration from icons she admires, likeElliot Page,Brandi Carlileand Allison Bechdel.Highlighting the accomplishments and strength of the queer community is especially vital now, as there is an increasing tide of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation across the United States.
“We need to protect the most vulnerable members of our community, which are trans people, and we need to be fighting and protecting each other,” Kellogg says. “We are one community and we all have to stick together.”
Sylvie Rosokoff

It’s because of this urgency to fight and protect that makes queer joy all the more crucial. The book, for all of its romance and drama, is also filled with fun. The characters attend disastrous work-sanctioned pool parties, blast “absurd” country music and hold many memorable conversations with their found families. It is a book, in many ways, about starting over and celebrating the small things.“[There] is this sense of queer joy and this idea that life can be fulfilling and three dimensional and satisfying, not in spite of being queer, but actually because of it,” Kellogg says of the novel.
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source: people.com