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Tell the Rest

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Two estranged childhood friends find themselves on parallel paths to return to the site of the conversion therapy camp that tore them apart.


Delia Barnes and Ernest Wrangham met as teens at Celebration Camp, a church-supported conversion therapy program—a dubious, unscientific Christian practice meant to "change" a person's sexuality. After witnessing a close friend suffer a devastating tragedy in the hands of the camp "counselors," they escaped in the night, only to take separate roads to their distant homes.


They have no idea how each have fared through the years. Delia is a college basketball coach who prides herself on being an empowering and self-possessed role model for her players. But when she gets fired from her elite East Coast university and loses her wife to another woman in rapid succession, she returns to her hometown of Rockside, Oregon to coach the girls' basketball team at her high school alma mater.


Ernest, meanwhile, is a renowned poet in New York City who's left behind his loving husband for a temporary teaching job in Portland, Oregon. His work has always been boundary-pushing, fearless. But the poem he's most wanted to write—about his dangerous escape from Celebration Camp—remains stubbornly out of reach.


Both remain on a mission to overcome the consequences and inhumane costs of conversion therapy. As events find them hurtling toward each other once again, they both grapple with the necessity of remaining steadfast in one's truth—no matter how slippery that can be. Tell the Rest is a powerful novel about coming to terms—with family, history, violence, loss, sexuality, and ultimately, with love.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 2, 2023
      Two queer people who escaped Christian conversion therapy as teens find their way back to each other as adults in the keenly observed latest from Bledsoe (The Evolution of Love). Delia, who is white, was 13 when she ran away from Celebration Camp with 16-year-old Ernest, who is Black. Twenty-five years later, they’re successful in their respective fields—Delia as a college women’s basketball coach, Ernest as a poet—but they both carry deep wounds from the conversion therapy and neither have any idea where the other ended up. The collapse of Delia’s marriage and the loss of her job send her back to her hometown of Rockside, Ore., to coach the high school girl’s basketball team. Earnest, who is teaching in Portland, reads about Delia’s return in the newspaper. After they reunite, they grapple with their anger and anguish, which include memories of a fellow camper at Celebration who was punished for his defiance. Ernest’s story line is less developed than Delia’s, though Bledsoe paints an engrossing and complicated picture of small-town life and queer survival. Even if this doesn’t reach its full potential, it’s nevertheless a triumph of compassion. Agent: Reiko Davis, DeFiore & Co.

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  • English

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