![]() ![]() The author is trans herself, and the way she writes Danny is a great example of how important #ownvoices writing is. It’s a really well-balanced blend of eye-popping hero action, YA musing, and sensitive coming-of-age moments. ![]() ![]() I’ve never read anything quite like it before and while I’m not gagging for the rest of the series, I’m pretty sure I’m going to read it eventually. Becoming her ideal self causes problems that superpowers can’t solve–especially when it turns out that some of the most powerful heroines on Earth are TERFs, her best friend is an undercover incel, and the Nemesis is coming–whatever that is.ĭreadnought is wild, y’all. Not only is Port City’s newest hero a shy teenage lesbian, she’s also a closeted trans girl and has transphobic parents. In Danny’s case, the mantle makes her cisgender. With his dying breath, he hands her his mantle, a mystical object that not only gifts its wearer with superpowers, but remakes them physically into their ideal self - bigger, stronger, handsomer. What is unusual is the defeat of the world’s greatest superhero Dreadnought, who falls at Danny’s feet, mortally wounded. One day, while hiding behind the mall and painting her toenails, trying desperately to grab a few moments of peace, a superhero fight breaks out overhead. Danny Tozer is an awkward teenage girl surviving the worst part of high school. ![]()
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