Only on the Weekends
Only on the Weekends
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2022--
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HarperCollins
Annotation: From the Stonewall Award-winning author of The Black Flamingo comes a romantic coming-of-age novel in verse about pursui... more
 
Reviews: 5
Catalog Number: #318835
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Publisher: HarperCollins
Copyright Date: 2022
Edition Date: 2022 Release Date: 05/24/22
Pages: 551 pages
ISBN: 0-06-315798-5
ISBN 13: 978-0-06-315798-9
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2022931777
Dimensions: 22 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Fri May 27 00:00:00 CDT 2022)

Starred Review Mack is an openly gay teenager whose father is a renowned filmmaker. He has privilege in his wealth, but he still experiences the ups and downs of high school 's not sure whether his close groups of friends are using him for his material wealth, and though he has a decent relationship with his father, he's never met his deceased mother's family. After he finally snags his dream guy, K, Mack is surprised to learn that his father is uprooting them for three months to shoot a film in Glasgow, Scotland. Mack's relationship with K seems fragile, and he is worried that this sudden move will add more strain to their relationship. Further complicating Mack's situation is meeting movie star and trans activist Finlay while on the shoot. Stonewall winner Atta's novel in verse is an exquisite and detailed look at friendship, compromises, family, and love, deftly capturing Mack's insecurities in a voice authentic to the high-school experience. Readers will easily relate to Mack's complex feelings about his plight while empathizing with his friends and family as they try to negotiate their own relationships. Text exchanges included in the novel reveal even more vulnerability in the characters. While most of Mack's conflicts are interpersonal, Atta also seamlessly examines intersectionality as the teen explores English, Scottish, and Yoruba cultures throughout his travels. The vivid, multifaceted depiction of teenage emotions makes this highly recommended.

Horn Book (Fri Jan 13 00:00:00 CST 2023)

This novel in verse follows the first romantic relationship experiences of a Black, queer, fat teenage boy learning to find love and acceptance within himself. Mack lives in London with his movie director father, whom he rarely sees. His loneliness lifts when he begins a romance with his longtime crush, male classmate K, who is not out; Mack reluctantly agrees to keep the relationship secret but wishes their time together included more than handholding and kissing. When Mack and his father move to Glasgow for two months to film a documentary about Fin, a social media-famous transgender teen, Mack struggles with long-distance intimacy and with his newly developing feelings for Fin. Short stanzas break up the lengthy text, easing readability. Mack's romantic struggles and insecurities are relatable to a broad audience, and the characters are varied enough in race, nationality, religion, sexual orientation, and gender identity that many teens will recognize themselves. Russell Reece

Kirkus Reviews

Friendship, family, and film collide in this queer love triangle.Life in London is star-studded for 16-year-old Mack, a Black British boy of Nigerian Yoruba descent, son of film director Tejumola Fadayomi. Mack gets asked on the red carpet about his rumored relationship with Finlay, the leading actor in his father's latest film. The book then moves back in time 18 months to when Mack gets to know Maz, a girl at school. They become fast friends, bonding over food and the shared loss of their mums to cancer. Mack sees this as an opportunity to get close to Maz's cousin Karim, a popular athlete of Egyptian descent. They start dating but are forced to hide their relationship; K isn't out to his basketball team. Mack's poetry, text messages, and intimate conversations give insight into his insecurities, from wearing makeup in public to being the subject of fat jokes in the press: This raw beauty and honesty are the verse novel's greatest strengths. When Mack and his dad temporarily move to Scotland to shoot a movie, he can only see K on the weekends. Their relationship is further tested when Mack actually begins to fall for Scottish Fin, who is White, trans, and has 2 million social media followers. Once this central tension is set, the novel, that includes diverse cultural influences in the dialogue, builds slowly and ends abruptly. (This review has been updated for factual accuracy.)Emotionally frank scenes from a romance and the cutting-room floor. (Verse novel. 13-18)

Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

In an emotional free verse novel, Atta (The Black Flamingo) follows the tumultuous love life of a gay Londoner of Nigerian Yoruba descent. Nearly 16 and self-conscious about the fatphobia he experiences, narrator Mackintosh -Mack- Fadayomi is shocked when his schoolmate, Black British basketball star Karim, of Egyptian descent, expresses romantic interest in Mack. Karim is closeted, preferring -to do things quietly,- and his inconsistent attention confuses Mack. Just as they start finding a balance, Mack-s film director father announces a temporary move for the family, to Glasgow. There, Mack meets the white Scottish star of his dad-s project, transmasculine teen Finlay, whose flirting (in a voice conveyed in Scottish dialect) excites him. While Mack and Karim struggle to make their way forward, Mack justifies a growing emotional affair with Fin, until forced to make a decision. Prose-like verse traces a slow-burn love triangle that avoids excusing Mack-s actions, centering a protagonist whose emotional arc unpacks themes of young love and self-acceptance alongside intersections of body image, gender identity, race, and sexuality. Ages 14-up. (May)

School Library Journal (Mon Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2022)

Gr 9 Up —Mackintosh "Mack" Fadayomi is the neglected, gay, Nigerian son of a famous film director. With a home movie theater, all the latest game consoles, and unlimited good snacks, his life is the envy of all of his friends. But with his father always gone, and his friends always taking from him, naturally he feels alone and taken advantage of. He ventures out of his bubble and takes Food Tech at school, where he befriends Maz, the cousin of his hopeless crush, K, the star of the basketball team. K, as it turns out, is also gay and very closeted. Their romance begins, which, from Mack's side, is incredibly confusing and insecure. He struggles with body image, jealousy, and feeling "hidden" by K's being closeted. More challenges hit their relationship when Mack's dad moves them to Scotland and Mack enters a maybe more than friendship with Finn, the trans lead actor in his dad's film. This lengthy, slow-burn novel in verse is a raw, real, deep dive into the messy internal world of its relatable main character. Readers will become attached to Mack and will want to know exactly how this love triangle plays out. Nigerian, Yoruba, and Scottish cultural influences appear throughout. VERDICT Purchase where realistic fiction and novels in verse are popular.—Kayla Fontaine

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Fri May 27 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Horn Book (Fri Jan 13 00:00:00 CST 2023)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Mon Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Interest Level: 9-12

From the Stonewall Award-winning author of The Black Flamingo comes a romantic coming-of-age novel in verse about pursuing the love we know we deserve. The ideal next read for fans of Kacen Callender, Elizabeth Acevedo, and Becky Albertalli.

Mack is a hopeless romantic—likely a hazard of growing up on film sets thanks to his father’s job. He has had a crush on Karim for as long as he can remember, and he can’t believe it when gorgeous, popular Karim seems into him too.

But when Mack’s father takes on a new directing project in Scotland, Mack has to move away, and he soon discovers how painful long-distance relationships can be. It’s awful to be so far away from Karim, and it’s made worse by the fact that Karim can be so hard to read.

Then Mack meets actor Finlay on set, and the world turns upside down again. Fin seems fearless, and his confidence could just be infectious.

Award-winning author Dean Atta crafts a beautifully nuanced and revelatory story in verse about the exquisite highs and lows of first love and self-discovery.


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