This Moth Saw Brightness

A.A. Vacharat
3.84
63 ratings 38 reviews
A weird and revelatory debut that vividly captures the dislocation of growing up BIPOC and neurodivergent in a country awash in both conspiracy theories and genuine conspiracies."The invisible D in my name is my mother’s second most lasting contribution to my life."‘Wayne Le—known as "Invisible-D Dwayne" at school—has been invited to participate in a seemingly ordinary, innocuous adolescent health study by a prestigious university. The study has a few nice perks, but most important to ‘Wayne, is the opportunity to give his immigrant father an accomplishment to be proud of—something that's been in sort supply since 'Wayne's mother left.But the study quickly proves to be anything but ordinary and innocuous, and ‘Wayne, his best friend Kermit, and a fellow study participant named Jane (a girl who shall not be manic-pixied) find themselves sucked into an M. C. Escherlike maze of conspiracies that might be entirely in their heads or might truly be a sinister government plot.
Genres: Young AdultContemporaryFictionAudiobookMental Health
448 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
18 (29%)
4 star
25 (40%)
3 star
13 (21%)
2 star
6 (10%)
1 star
1 (2%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by A.A. Vacharat

Lists with this book

Sunrise on the Reaping
Oathbound
Cruel Is the Light
YA Novels of 2025
613 books528 voters
Beyond the Austic Plateau - A Parent's Story and Practical Help with Autism
There's More Than One Way Home
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Best Books for Autism
154 books131 voters
Look Me in the Eye
Be Different: Adventures of a Free-Range Aspergian
Unseelie
The Kiss Quotient
On the Edge of Gone
A Kind of Spark
Books by Actually Autistic Authors
448 books260 voters