It’s a surreal and scary situation, but at least there’s August, the tenacious and cute woman she keeps meeting. All she has are the contents of her backpack. A queer activist from the 1970s, Jane has been displaced in time and is now trapped in the same car of the same subway line, with limited memory of who she was or how she wound up there. Well, she does-again and again-because Jane is stuck. August knows that moments shared with strangers on public transit are fleeting, but she can’t stop thinking about Jane and whether she’ll ever run into her again. Then she spills coffee on herself on the Q train, and like a knight in shining armor, Jane approaches with a red scarf to hide the offending stain. The only thing that’s missing is romance, which she doesn’t expect to find anytime soon.ĪLSO IN BOOKPAGE: Casey McQuiston on what comes next after coming out. But the city has other plans, and August immediately finds her people in the form of three supportive and vibrant roommates. August sees New York City as the perfect place to strike out on her own, a bastion for loners and cynics like herself. Their loving but co-dependent relationship is complicated, to say the least. One Last Stop is a delightful speculative tale that follows August Landry, a somewhat cynical mystery lover who finds the ultimate puzzle in Jane, a punk-rock lesbian she keeps encountering on the subway.Īugust was raised by her single mom, who was obsessed with the disappearance of her brother, August’s uncle. After her blockbuster debut novel, Red, White & Royal Blue, author Casey McQuiston returns with another queer romantic comedy-with a time slip twist.
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