The Blitz book club: Freak Show

Billy Bloom is going to teach you how to be fabulous.

The teen drag queen has just moved to (red alert!) Florida to live with his dad in Fort Lauderdale after proving to be a little too much for his Connecticut mother to handle (which is saying something since she’s a boozer who likes to drug their cat and wear it as a fur stole).

When Billy makes his grand entrance at Eisenhower Academy dressed as a pirate (he thought it best to go for a butch look on day one), things don’t go over as well as he expected. Instead of celebrating his fashion sense and all-around amazingness, the kids at Eisenhower (a school made up of Aberzombies jocks and religious Crucivixens) react as you might expect at a Southern high school where the new kid is in drag and working his homeroom like it’s his dressing room and he’s a pilled-out Liza Minnelli.

But Billy is nothing if not resilient, and instead of conforming to the bland bigots he schools with, his next look is even more outrageous. So outrageous, in fact, it catches the attention of Flip Kelly, football hero and Prince of Pout. Unfortunately, it also catches the attention of Billy’s other classmates — who put him in a coma.

With the help of Flip, Billy pulls off a glamorous resurrection, and in a showdown of looking bitchin’ versus tradition, starts a campaign to be his school’s first queen prom queen.

James St James, author of Party Monster and blogger for World of Wonder, writes exactly as he speaks in person — fast, funny and feverish. With Billy Bloom, he has created the teen idol we all wish we were brave enough to be.

Keep Reading

The cover of Work to Do by Jules Wernersbach; Jules Wernersbach

‘Work to Do’ shows just how dramatic a grocery store can get

Jules Wernersbach’s energetic novel delves into the intricacies of queer entrepreneurship, climate change—and class revolt
Side-by-side images of author Sara Ahmed holding her dog, wearing pink sparkles with dark hair, and the cover of her book "No! The Art and Activism of Complaining." The book cover is light pink with black text on a white background.

Sara Ahmed says we need more complainers, not less

Whether it’s queer community, academic or government institutions, the feminist scholar says there's value in complaints
Nini Coco with an up arrow behind her; Juicy Love Dion with a down arrow behind her

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ Season 18, Episode 14 power ranking: The final three

Who can win? Who will win?
Zane Phillips

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ Season 18, Episode 14 recap: Top of the morning to Ru

We’ve finally reached the end of in-season play, with just a LaLaPaRuZa and finale to go
Advertisement