Sixteen-year-old Quinn Remington is agender, asexual, and aromantic, all rolled into one. When Quinn is sent to live with their grandmother in tiny seatown Greenburrow, Maine for a summer, they find themselves in a situation unlike any others they've seen.
In Greenburrow, hatred and prejudice reign eternal, against individuals on the LGBTQ+ spectrum especially. Quinn feels almost more isolated than they did living with their parents. Local parents expect their sons to play football and have girlfriends, and expect their daughters to be quiet and sweet and amicable. Gender is painted in the "perfect" pinks and blues, and Quinn can't place where they belong, especially as strange things keep happening all around them. That is, until they find a few friends that are in the same boat.
Quinn is determined to answer all the questions spinning around in their head, but even with friends by their side, they're just not sure if they can. "all the world's nobodies, all the king's men" tells a tale of teenage rebellion, drama, activism, and just a twist of the paranormal.
Elliot Jensen and Elliot Fintry have a lot in common. They share the same name, the same house, the same school, oh and they hate each other but, as they will quickly learn, there is a fine line between love and hate.