![]() Ultimately, the story is a rom-com, but it’s one that delves into Armenian LGBTQ+ identities. ![]() In “Sorry, Bro,” a young journalist gives in to her mother and attends cultural events filled with eligible Armenian bachelors she is instantly smitten by a woman who is passionate about their shared heritage. That conversation in Voskuni’s head led to “Sorry, Bro,” the author’s debut novel, published earlier this year via Berkley Romance. Related: Sign up for our free newsletter about books, authors, reading and more “There was something interesting there and the Armenianness played into it, too.” “I was interested in the dynamic between these two women,” Voskuni recalls on a recent phone call. One was a woman wondering why Armenians couldn’t have a conversation without talking about the Genocide the other, also the voice of a woman, was correcting her. ![]() ![]() Taleen Voskuni was on the Caltrain heading to work in the San Francisco Bay Area when she heard two voices in her head. ![]()
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