Love Comes Home by Andrew Grey7/8/2023 ![]() I think it was that experience that showed me very early in life that people are people and a difference (I hate the term disability) is largely irrelevant to the person inside. We had fun and figured out our own ways of playing. ![]() I was young and can barely remember him, but I do remember that it didn’t matter. He could read lips and we played together as children sometimes. One of her friends had a grandson who was deaf. ![]() She was a successful career woman at a time when women rarely worked outside the home. My grandmother was a very progressive woman. ![]() As a kid and a writer to be, I was blessed with family friends who had survived polio, but got around using wheelchairs or braces and crutches. This means gay men who are blind, deaf, in wheelchairs, and mute to name a few examples. However I feel it’s equally important that other members of our community are represented. There are plenty of gay romances that show gay men in every profession possible. One theme that is very important to me is that everyone deserves to seethemselves in a book. The first three in audio versions and book 4 in ebook format.Īndrew Grey talks about Inclusion in his Books Details below.īethany will post her review of ‘Love Comes Silently’ (Senses 1) today and will post the review of another book in the ‘Senses’ series each Wednesday for the next three weeks. Read Andrew Grey’s Guest Post about Inclusion and win an eBook of his ‘Senses’ series. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |