Book Reviews

  • review written 23 January 2024
    book to be published 09 April 2024

    Teenage Dirtbags by James Acker

    Rating: 5 out of 5.

    I absolutely loved this book and I am not a Young Adult (YA) reader. While reading, it reminded me of my own high school experience without making me feel bad—it was that angst while knowing everything is gonna be alright. I loved that it started off with such tension that then led beautifully into what ultimately led the boys back together—a revenge scheme.

    The last time we decided to have a sleepover, two years ago, I gave Phil one of my Hanukkah presents and he gave me a slap across the face.

    The book flips perspective back and forth between high school students Jackson Pasternak and Phil Reyno as they navigate their junior year and their past. With the flipped perspectives James Acker packs in lots of the differences and similarities between the two boys; with those comparisons, I felt for both and related to both. Phil holds trauma and Jackson has his own setbacks as well. And through their silly revenge plot made against Cameron (a sociopath? psychopath?—portrayed beautifully/ugi-ly and scarily well and with visceral depiction of bullying and manipulation) and co. they are able to reevaluate all those comparisons in a new light.

    Five years of finding each other. Finding all those things in common. All gone. Because our differences just wouldn’t stop. We couldn’t stop them from mattering. We couldn’t make it to high school. Phil Reyno couldn’t stop himself from hating his best friend and Jackson Pasternak couldn’t convince him any better. We just couldn’t find enough in common. Tonight needed to be different.

    Teens portrayed in Sex Education, Freaks and Geeks, Kids,…have a similar rawness that the teens in this book do, but those references almost seem too polished in comparison. (And yes, I use movies and shows as reference because I’m not a YA reader normally. I’M SORRY.)

    I took a breath. “Because it’s really hard for me sometimes. I don’t know why. I don’t understand it. It’s really hard for me to remember that I’m here, sometimes. That what I do here matters. Who I meet. What I say. And I do so much to remind myself. I help so many people and I’m a part of so many things and I make such a great argument for myself. Jackson Pasternak exists. He must. Look at everything he does.
    Bolu was sitting up. Watching me curiously. “It’s a contradiction. Doing so much. Feeling so far from it.”
    “Yeah. A contradiction. An inconsistency.”

    The author captures sadness so well in a single line

    “You’re the only person who’s come to see me.”

    and the honesty with which these kids speak to one another are little openings so real because of the history established in Acker’s tender character development.


    This sadness is also in the reflection teens do about their place in the world, including their place with the adults in their world. Although the parents and adults were limitedly shown in the book their absence did not feel orphan hero story trope because of the presence that was captured.

    He chuckled. “I get it. It’s been a minute. But you are quick. Y’get that from me.”
    “Oooooh. That’s what I got from you. I was starting to wonder.”
    “Okay, cool it, chief. We’re just eating. We don’t gotta always be…on” I rolled my eyes and focused my attention quickly on my quickly melting cherry shake.

    “But you have such a pretty voice, Jackson, you and your father. I think you could use more fun in your life.”…”You could use silly. You’ve acted like you were forty since you were fourteen, my love, something silly could be incredibly enriching. Not for the résumé or the colleges, something silly and simple.”

    I think as adults, we want to say that we have figured ourselves out more than this time sliver as a teenager—and many of us will say we will never know enough, let alone about ourselves. But the magic of this teen mindset is that finding yourself—what you are and what you are not—seems the upmost importance at that time and James Acker captures this so well, especially for those of us who never felt like they worth being seen—or were only seen for what they lacked, or were only seen as something to be used.

    Trigger warning / content warning (tw/cw)

    (graphic): bullying, homophobia, toxic relationships/friendships, emotional abuse, (moderate): alcoholism, fatphobia, (minor): classism, drug use, self harm, suicide attempt

  • review written 06 March 2021
    book published 02 March 2021

    Winter’s Orbit by Everina Maxwell

    Rating: 4 out of 5.

    Everina Maxell’s intricately detailed debut novel is packed with political intrigue and lighthearted moments. It is the perfect temperature for those who are interested in an epic science fiction world that features romance.

    Winter’s Orbit is set in the long reigning Iskat Empire and begins a month after the death of Imperial Prince Taam and a month before a Resolution signing between Iskat and Thea. The Iskat Emperor orders Prince Kiem, Taam’s cousin and tabloid magnet, to marry Jainan, Taam’s widower and a reserved Thean, to ease hostility between their two worlds and take over the Resolution signing.

    But the two men soon learn that Taam’s death may have been no accident and Jainan is seen by the Iskat government as a possible culprit; so as Kiem and Jainan build on their unsteady but respectful relationship, they also build a case to solve Taam’s murder and ultimately to save their two worlds from a brewing war.

    Readers may relish deciphering who murdered Taam by way of two amateaur sleuths, looking out at the stars from the stunning but cold Iskat Empire, finding out what the heck are Iskat bears (are they in fact lizards?), and driving flybugs…maybe.

    Trigger warning / content warning (tw/cw)

    (graphic): domestic abuse (from past relationship), emotional abuse, (moderate): physical abuse, torture

  • review written 02 April 2017
    book published 04 April 2017

    The Romance Reader’s Guide to Life by Sharon Pywell

    Rating: 2 out of 5.

    Two sisters narrate this genre-twisting tale by Sharon Pywell. The first chapter is narrated by the elder sister Lilly, already dead in Where She Is Now with their childhood dog, Mr. Boppit, and begins with

    If you’re reading this, then you aren’t where I am, which is dead.

    which pulls you right along every other chapter opposite Neave, the younger of the “Irish twins” (they were born exactly one year apart).

    Neave describes her life that led up til now, the 1950s, how she learned about love through books while reading to her elderly neighbor, how she and her sister began a cosmetics business right after WWII ended, and how she is presently in danger like her sister had been. Lilly is the supposed reckless child, the eldest daughter, who is swept up by a lust-like love and lets her sister Neave be the one who “followed in her wake.” The sisters are sandwiched between an older brother, Snyder, and the youngest sister, Janey.

    Neave’s narration begins with describing life in Lynn, MA, in 1936 when she got her first job at 11 years old reading to a going-blind Mrs. Daniels. This was Snyder’s castoff job, reading to an elderly neighbor who sometimes liked to read romance novels; Snyder’s enjoyment comes from comic books. Mrs. Daniels provides a safe space for Neave; the other space being her hall closet where she reads the first of many “borrowed” books of Mrs. Daniels called The Pirate Lover. This is one of the genre-twists, a story within a story, a parallel to the universe of Neave and Lilly, add in a little romance, historical fiction, thriller, and magical realism (a limbo-like afterlife with a talking dog who wears heels) and you got quite a tale.

    The parallel to The Pirate Lover and the not-quite-linear storytelling is quite beautiful and aids the foreshadowing in the novel:

    Lilly didn’t really think evil existed. Of all the reasons I wished I were her, that’s the big one. That blindness was her doing and undoing; mine too, maybe, but not in the same order. That’s why I’m here telling her story and she’s not.

    Overall this novel intertwined two fantastic tales about the effects of love, romantic or otherwise. This novel explores how family members parallel one another and shape one another, as well as how often stories are about the same thing or at least we may find the same answers within them.

    Trigger warning / content warning (tw/cw)

    (graphic): animal death, domestic abuse, (minor): sexual abuse