![]() Little does Cin know, they've got a lot more in common than he imagines-including their shared discomfort with their assigned genders, and all the complications that go with it. ![]() Which he is, almost frustratingly so, to the point Cin wishes maybe he hadn't been so fair because he never had any intention of getting attached to Tom, who seems to come from a world far too different from his own for anything between them to last. A Boy Called Cin by Cecil Wilde A Song of Fire and Ice Series by George R.R. But when he reappears in Tom's lecture, all Tom knows is that he doesn't want the man slipping away a second time.Īgreeing to dinner with a man he only knows from internet gossip columns isn't the wisest decision Cin's ever made, but he wants to like the infamous Tom Walford and he can't do that if he doesn't give the man a fair chance to be likeable. ![]() An asterisk () indicates that the author openly identifies with that identity. Alcohol use Child abuse (mentioned) Dysphoria Misgendering Surgery Transphobia (including internalized) Representation. On impulse, he buys the man a cup-but an attempt to strike up conversation ends in the young man walking off, seemingly put off by Tom Walford-the tabloids' favourite billionaire-buying him coffee. A Boy Called Cin by Cecil Wilde is a young adult romance novel, originally published on July 8, 2015. ![]() On the search for a cup of coffee before the guest lecture he's giving, Tom spies a tired, half-frozen young man who looks even more in need of coffee than him. ![]()
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