Publisher's Hardcover ©2018 | -- |
Coming of age. Fiction.
Conduct of life. Fiction.
Brothers and sisters. Fiction.
Gay fathers. Fiction.
Mothers and daughters. Fiction.
Bombings. Fiction.
London (England). Fiction.
England. Fiction.
A 15-year-old London girl struggles with family tensions against a backdrop of bombings, crime, and political skulduggery.Lena, whose mum died when she was only 3, has been lovingly raised by her brother, Danny (20 years her senior), and his partner, Nick. But Danny's just gotten a job working for a law-and-order political candidate, and now there's constant tension at home. There's a bomber attacking East London supermarkets, and Danny's boss—in statements Danny wrote for him—uses anti-crime language that Nick, who runs a hippie coffee shop that displays anti-establishment leaflets, despises. As the couple decide to separate to ease the tension in their relationship, Lena becomes increasingly curious about the mother she doesn't remember, further infuriating her brother. Why is Danny so hostile toward their mother's old friends? Real life is messy, Lena learns. As well as that: You don't have to be political to be moral; good people sometimes do rotten things; doing right sometimes hurts the wrong people; and you don't always get cinematic closure with the secrets of your past. Several secondary characters represent the multiculturalism of modern London; Lena and her family are assumed white.Amid a thoroughly contemporary story about terrorism, email leaks, and a divisive political climate, Lena's coming-of-age is wonderfully individual and heartbreakingly real. (Realistic fiction. 12-16)
ALA Booklist (Thu Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2018)Alena has lived with her brother, Danny, since she was three. She knows he and his boyfriend share secrets about Alena and Danny's mother's troubled life. But every time Lena tries to talk to Danny about it, he shuts her down. At 15, Lena feels old enough to handle the truth, and if Danny won't give it to her, well, she'll start making trouble herself by trying to dig up the real story. Her two friends, Ollie and Tegan, will be there to help her through the triumphs and sorrows that soon come, as Lena tries to navigate her confusing past and uncertain future with a frightening present unknown person called the East End Bomber is terrorizing her area of London. Barter's debut displays impressive skill and authenticity in relating issues of family secrets and grief. Readers will connect with Lena on her dramatic, heartrending journey as she begins to suss out the ambiguity of other people's choices and fateful decisions that happened long before she was born.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)A 15-year-old London girl struggles with family tensions against a backdrop of bombings, crime, and political skulduggery.Lena, whose mum died when she was only 3, has been lovingly raised by her brother, Danny (20 years her senior), and his partner, Nick. But Danny's just gotten a job working for a law-and-order political candidate, and now there's constant tension at home. There's a bomber attacking East London supermarkets, and Danny's boss—in statements Danny wrote for him—uses anti-crime language that Nick, who runs a hippie coffee shop that displays anti-establishment leaflets, despises. As the couple decide to separate to ease the tension in their relationship, Lena becomes increasingly curious about the mother she doesn't remember, further infuriating her brother. Why is Danny so hostile toward their mother's old friends? Real life is messy, Lena learns. As well as that: You don't have to be political to be moral; good people sometimes do rotten things; doing right sometimes hurts the wrong people; and you don't always get cinematic closure with the secrets of your past. Several secondary characters represent the multiculturalism of modern London; Lena and her family are assumed white.Amid a thoroughly contemporary story about terrorism, email leaks, and a divisive political climate, Lena's coming-of-age is wonderfully individual and heartbreakingly real. (Realistic fiction. 12-16)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Barter debuts with an engrossing family story set in London. Danny became the legal guardian of his younger sister, Alena, when she was three and he was 22, after their mother died. Alena is 15 as the novel opens, and she yearns to learn more about her activist mother, but even the smallest question sends Danny into a rage. Only Nick, Danny-s longtime partner and Alena-s second dad, will engage with her on the subject. Though Alena has plenty of strong friendships, and everyone is talking about a bomber terrorizing London-s East End, the focus of this novel is on her family, her growing conflict with Danny about their mother, and the job he-s taken managing the campaign of a conservative candidate, to Nick-s chagrin. Barter confidently laces conflict and tension into the relationships among Nick, Danny, and Alena, drawing out the hardships they-ve faced during a decade of grief, doing their best to be a stable family. The bomber subplot feels peripheral, a device intended to add urgency, but Barter-s novel should appeal to a wide audience for its emotional honesty and its complex characters and relationships. Ages 13-up.
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
ALA Booklist (Thu Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2018)
ALA/YALSA Best Book For Young Adults
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Voice of Youth Advocates
When she was three, Alena's activist mother died. She's been raised by her half-brother and his boyfriend in East London, which is being targeted by a lone bomber. Alena desperately wants to know about her mother, but her brother won't tell her anything.
Alena's played by the rules all her life, but that's over. When she starts digging up information herself and does something that costs her brother his job and puts the family in jeopardy, Alena discovers she can be a troublemakerjust like her mother.
Now she must figure out what sort of trouble she's willing to get into to find out the truth.