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Nick Wilgus

Author of Bilal's Bread

20 Works 242 Members 12 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Nick Wilgus, "Sulayman X"

Series

Works by Nick Wilgus

Bilal's Bread (2005) 52 copies, 5 reviews
Shaking the Sugar Tree (2014) 34 copies, 2 reviews
Mindfulness and Murder (2003) 28 copies, 1 review
Adventures of a Bird-Shit Foreigner (2006) 21 copies, 1 review
The Garden of Hell (2006) 20 copies
Stones in the Road (Sugar Tree #2) (2015) 14 copies, 1 review
Tears of a Dragon (2011) 10 copies
Raise It Up (2017) 8 copies
Get Your Shine On (2015) 8 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Wilgus, Nick
Legal name
Wilgus, Nick
Other names
X, Sulayman [pen name]
Wilde, Jerome
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Occupations
journalist
Organizations
Bangkok Post

Members

Reviews

This is a love story, but not a romance. This is love of a deeper, more visceral kind... and it is beautiful. Hen, Sam and Ishy; love them.


This was not what I was expecting, maybe I should read the blurbs more carefully, but I'm so happy I read it. The subject matter is pretty heavy. It's handled carefully, but it does hurt to read and know that many go through it in real life. The language and *phobia is real and certain to hit sore spots.

It is a touching story of family and the forming of and keeping of one, under the most f#cked up circumstances.

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mearias | Nov 14, 2024 |
For the last nine years, Wiley has been rocking the career of single father to a meth baby; it hasn't been easy with all of the birth defects brought on by the meth or the guilt of being the reason he was born addicted to meth in the first place. But it definitely does not make it easier as he lives in the South with a family more or less constantly threatening to call social services, just because Noah is being raised by a single gay father. Despite the hardships they face, Wiley wouldn't want his life any other way.

Well, at least not until Jackson stumbles into their lives. He's a pretty city boy from the North but it's hard not to fall hard for the caring man who seems to enjoy Noah's company almost as much as he does Wiley's. It's also hard not to picture an every day life with the three of them as their own little family. Perhaps it's not too late for Wiley, and Noah, to get a proper family? But as always, things are hardly as perfect as they seem. Wiley's family remains skeptic about how his sexuality and life choices affect his son whilst Jackson are keeping secrets...

Good lord, I enjoyed this book so much. I loved Wiley and his constant need to be funny, I loved Noah with one of the largest hearts I've ever encountered and Jackson whose pretty face will haunt me in the form of Jack Falahee. It was refreshing to read about such a father figure as Wiley; he has done a lot of mistakes and will definitely do more before his time is up but that doesn't stop him from being an above average dad who truly fights for his son, and actually cares about his interests and opinions.

I also love the total grey area when it comes to his family. There's no doubt both Wiley and Noah are both loved by their close relatives yet they don't understand either of them at all and even goes as far to consider Wiley a faggot sinner.

There's, however, two reasons as why I'm only giving it three stars. The first one is the extremely ableist language used, especially by Wiley. I get that some of it is their thing, said with love and trust, but he ventures into slurs that doesn't apply to Noah a lot and it made me feel uncomfortable even if none of these were directed at me. Like, there's such an obvious difference. For example, I completely adored Wiley's grandfather who were throwing every slur against homosexual as possible but he did it with a twinkle in his eye and Wiley obviously found him quite amusing. They had a thing based on trust. Wiley knew he wasn't just using those slurs to put him down which I can't say the same about when it comes to m*dget being used by Wiley, and such.

The other reason is that I honestly found it quite repetitive half-way through. The author kept going back to phrases and such too many times and it almost made you want to skip certain parts because you'd basically read it before. Like, we get it. They're in the South. I'm sure Jack does too. He doesn't need to hear ”You're in the South now, boy!” like fifteen times throughout the novel. He would be more than fine without it; and so would I.
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autisticluke | 1 other review | Nov 14, 2019 |
This book was not pretty, this book was filling to the brim with with reality. It was gritty, and raw and honestly. Eugene! Thou art a heartless bitch but bravo to you for your misdirection! I really didn't enjoy this book because I was pissed off at most of the characters but I did like the fact that they were unfailingly honest and tried to be understanding even though they were going against what they were taught to believe. The characters feel so real in this series. I look forward to reading more by Mr. Wilgus.… (more)
 
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brandochic | Feb 22, 2016 |
Beautiful book. I loved every bit of it. I really wasn't a fan of papaw in the beginning but by the end I just wanted to kick him in the nuts and then squish him in a hug! The dialogue was witty and realistic and the trials In the book were an eye opener. On to the sequel to see what happens next!
 
Flagged
brandochic | 1 other review | Feb 22, 2016 |

Awards

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Statistics

Works
20
Members
242
Popularity
#93,893
Rating
3.9
Reviews
12
ISBNs
47
Languages
4

Charts & Graphs