<p><b>The hilarious and piercing memoir about growing up gay in a not-so-gay world.</b><br><br>¿An important story, told with a sharp wit and disarming humour<b>¿ MOHSIN ZAIDI</b><br><br>¿Vastly entertaining and wickedly funny¿<b> GREG MARSHALL </b><br><br><b><i>I¿m just a man, standing in front of a salad, asking it to be a cake.</i><br><br>What do you do when you¿re too gay for Pakistan, too Pakistani to be gay in America and you¿re ashamed of your body everywhere?<br><br>How can you find happiness despite years of humiliation, fear and a legion of Brooklyn hipsters who know you only as a queer from Whereveristan?<br><br>How do you summon the courage to be yourself no matter where you are?</b><br><br>Even as a young child in Lahore, Komail Aijazuddin knew he was different. Other boys didn¿t pirouette off their desks, get bullied for their ¿manboobs¿ or spontaneously burst into songs from <i>The Little Mermaid</i>. Other boys didn¿t play together like <i>that</i>.<br><br>Starved of a