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The letters I get today tell me that Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender (LGBT) teens and kids growing up in LGBT families still have a need for books that show them they're not alone and that there's a future for them, books that show them - and straight kids also- that LGBT folks have stories, too, stories about love and hate, joy and sorrow, fear and hope; stories about relationships and work and learning and dreams and courage; stories about universale as well as about being LGBT or having LGBT parents - in short, stories much like those featuring straight people, but experienced from the unique perspective of being LGBT in a predominantly straight world. Since I'm more familiar with those things and also with actual events in the Northeast than elsewhere in the country, I needed to rely more heavily on my sources for some of that background. [...]one of my friends called me up after she'd read the book and said, "Why did you kill the dog?" BAW: The letters I get today tell me that Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender (LGBT) teens and kids growing up in LGBT families still have a need for books that show them they're not alone and that there's a future for them, books that show themand straight kids alsothat LGBT folks have stories, too, stories about love and hate, joy and sorrow, fear and hope.