We haven't even gotten to the part where a boyfriend hides a devastating secret.
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And yet, somehow, Greg Marshall's debut book "Leg" is a comedic memoir.
"I wouldn't want to read a book about cerebral palsy and cancer and ALS and all the rest without it being funny," Marshall told ABC7 News Anchor Reggie Aqui. "And I certainly wouldn't want to have lived that life. Humor is a way of making it through."
This Pride Month we are showcasing new works by LGBTQ authors as part of 'Reggie's Exclusive V.I.P - only Pride-vate Book Club (where everyone is invited).'
Greg Marshall has always had a noticeable limp. His parents told him the problem with his leg was 'tight tendons.' It was actually cerebral palsy. He wouldn't know the real reason why he needed so many surgeries and physical therapy until he was almost 30.
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"As first I was indignant, in kind of a teenage way, but very quickly I got to a point where I finally had a term for the magnitude of what I had been through."
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Marshall's parents explained to him they didn't want a son who felt limited by his disability. They thought hiding his diagnosis would ultimately help. The strategy came with unintended consequences.
"I would try and hide and minimize my limp. I think because I had a secret I thought I didn't deserve the truth from other people."
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Marshall had the unusual journey of coming out twice. First, as a gay man. And, years later, as a person living with cerebral palsy. In "Leg," Marshall discovers the power of disabling a secret.
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"It's about tracing disability and queerness as sources of intimacy in a family."
"Leg: The story of a limb and the boy who grew from it" comes out June 13.