One of Entertainment Weekly's 20 Best New Books to Read in May *One of Bustle's Debut Books to Look Forward to This Spring and Summer *One of Electric Literature's 27 Debuts to Look Forward to in the First Half of 2021 *One of NewNowNext's 17 Exciting Queer Books to Savor This Summer *One of the Advocate's 5 Most Exciting LGBTQ+ Debut Books to Read This Summer *One of Men's Health's 25 Best LGBTQ+ Books to Read This Pride Month *Included on Lambda Literary's May's Most Anticipated LGBTQ Literature –
Included on Goodreads' 9 Books that Goodreads Editors Highly Recommend *Included on Entertainment Weekly's Pride 2021 Must List *Included on Goodreads' 2021 Pride Reading List –
Yes, Daddy is the kind of story that sticks with you and refuses to leave. Jonathan Parks-Ramage has written a gut-churning, heart-wrenching, blockbuster of a first novel. Deeply queer and deeply human, it is a book that describes what it means to be broken apart in trauma and grief and what it takes to be painfully, carefully stitched back together again. Parks-Ramage is an extraordinary new talent and Yes, Daddy is truly something special. –
"A dark and aching account, where the treachery of powerful men preys on the bodies and minds of the young. The excesses of a Hamptons summer cannot cover up the truth of how greed and need birth abuses so visceral as to touch the surreal. Parks-Ramage takes a reader into the fiery, unblinking sights of a tortured beast." –
Jonathan Parks-Ramage has written an incredibly tender, yet fearless, novel that reminds us of what it means to err, to be forgiven, to forgive, and to live. Yes, Daddy is a gem of a debut. –
Yes, Daddy is a deeply humane, complex account of public and private trauma in the age of fake news. Ultimately, this is a story of redemption in an era when grace seems impossible. Deeply familiar yet always surprising and–most important–well-written, this is a superb debut. –
"Dark, twisted, and tightly plotted, Yes, Daddy is a to-the-minute thriller about sex, violence, and power. Sure to disturb and enthrall, Jonathan Parks-Rampage's shocker of a debut was made for the screen and for our cultural moment." –
"Jonathan Parks-Ramage's dazzling novel Yes, Daddy deftly uses desire and violence to explode the allure of New York power gays. Yet Parks-Ramage has more on his mind than a rarefied milieu; as Yes, Daddy reaches its virtuosic conclusion, it's his bruised narrator's journey to redemption that elevates the book to a kind of ecstasy. A piercing new addition to the contemporary queer canon." –
Jonathan Parks-Ramage's debut novel is a queer gothic thriller you can't afford to miss. It centers on Jonah, who spends his days waiting tables and dreaming of making it in the theater world. His love affair with Richard, an award-winning playwright, may lead Jonah to the success he craves – but a summer spent in his lover's eerie Hamptons mansion could change everything. –
If you're in the mood for a dark, gothic (and scary!) romance, look for Yes, Daddy by Jonathan Parks-Ramage. It's a novel about a man who schemes to meet what he thinks is Mr. Wealthy and Right but he learns when he's finally invited to Mr. Right's mansion that something is very, very wrong. You can take a book like this on vacation but don't take it to bed with you. –
A riveting queer novel, Yes, Daddy takes a critical look at the way power imbalances play out in relationships. –
Empathetic. . . A story that offers all extremes, from verisimilitude to despair and from a lust for revenge to a longing for home. Fear settles over the reader as they wait for the next blow, making Jonah's story akin to that of the victim in Roxane Gay's An Untamed State. –
[An] emotionally complex debut . . . both erotic and chilling. –
A heart-racing and heartbreaking thriller. –
An unnerving examination of the relationship between Jonah, a young writer struggling in New York City, and Richard, an incredibly wealthy, much-lauded middle-aged playwright . . . In Yes, Daddy, Parks-Ramage deftly hops among multiple genres to spin an unsettling tale of abuse, betrayal, and atonement. –
Yes, Daddy serves to remind readers that sexual assault is not an issue that only straight people face . . . This is a knockout debut, one of the most exciting of the year. Will it make you uncomfortable? Yes, Daddy. Should you still absolutely read it? Yes, Daddy. –
Page-turning . . . Parks-Ramage suffuses his narrative with a rich atmosphere, somewhere between the Gothic and The Great Gatsby. –