Book Description
for Come Home to My Heart by Riley Redgate
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
In small, conservative Fisherton, South Carolina, high school seniors Gloria (white) and Xia (Chinese American/white) have little in common. Gloria is a devout Baptist who tries to control her same-sex attraction by limiting herself to five minutes per day on her blog, where she adds photos of girls and then scrupulously clears her browser history, knowing her dad will check it later. A social outcast and closeted lesbian, Xia is simply hanging on until she can escape her parents and small-town life for the more diverse, queer, and intellectual crowds in college. When Gloria neglects to clear her browser history one day, her parents discover her blog and promptly kick her out. She begins sleeping in the unused orchestra pit at school, meticulously saving food from her school lunches and stretching her cash out to pay for meager meals. While doing homework at the bookstore, she crosses paths with Xia, who works there, and the two strike up an unexpected friendship that turns into romance. But Gloria keeps her living situation a secret, writing letters to her parents and biding her time, even as her situation becomes more and more desperate. Realistic in its depiction of religious homophobia and LGBTQ teen homelessness, this novel makes space for complexity: Gloria finds a new church but has no desire to abandon Christianity. Neither does she dislike her small town, where queer people—like Xia’s boss, Mr. Avery, who offers much-needed support—do live and thrive. (Age 14 and older)
CCBC Book of the Week. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2025. Used with permission.