Kirkus Reviews QR Code
RUN LIKE A GIRL by Amaka Egbe Kirkus Star

RUN LIKE A GIRL

by Amaka Egbe

Pub Date: May 20th, 2025
ISBN: 9781335009937
Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Unwelcome changes come at a pivotal time for one high school junior in Texas.

Chidera Edwards has always had two constants in her life: track and her mother, a Black woman from Louisiana. So she’s scared and upset when her mother, who’s weathering a serious financial crisis, sends her to live temporarily with her Nigerian immigrant father halfway through the school year—the very same neglectful father Dera has barely seen since her parents got divorced when she was 6. On top of that, her new school may have more funds than her old one, but they don’t have a girls’ track team—and the timing couldn’t be worse if she hopes to get a sports scholarship for college. Dera, aware of her Title IX rights, gains permission to train with the boys’ team, but she must prove herself to them while also adapting to living with her father. One bright spot is bonding with irresistibly attractive teammate Gael Garcia, whose Afro-Colombian parents were deported. Dera also navigates encounters with a standoffish new classmate, a Black girl whom she expected to bond with, and she realizes that sometimes when we stand up for ourselves, we help others get ahead, too. The story features well-developed characters readers will cheer for and cry over. The action and emotion are balanced, as are the internal and external conflicts. Debut author Egbe’s writing is exceptional, capturing the nuances of adolescence, identity, and resilience.

Moving and inspirational.

(Fiction. 12-18)