Adolescent riptides test bonds of both friendship and kinship in this third of four loosely linked tales, following 2024’s Pike.
Sharing several members of its largely white English cast and a few plot elements with earlier outings (but well able to stand on its own), this simply written episode starts with another animal rescue. Fourteen-year-old Nicky and his intellectually disabled older brother, Kenny, interrupt a sparrow hawk that’s ripping into a rook, and they take the wounded bird home to nurse. But the story really focuses on Nicky’s suddenly rocky emotional state and his uncontrolled outbursts. The frantic, bloody attack is first relayed from the rook’s point of view, and as a result, Nicky’s narrative inherits a visceral immediacy that it never loses. The story follows the escalating consequences for Nicky of his simmering anger, a too-ready mouth, and a mad crush on classmate Sarah, which include expulsion from school and heavy doses of guilt for offending his friends, his dad, his dad’s terrific lady friend, and even his loyal and loving brother. Eventually, though, Nicky does get a grip on himself and, with the insight that our lives are the stories we tell ourselves and others, he resolutely sets out to mend fences. By the time the rook has nearly healed enough to fly, Nicky even has Sarah laughing with him. This brief, gripping novel will appeal even to reluctant readers.
A heartening message for readers buffeted by gusts of hormonal Sturm und Drang.
(Fiction. 13-18)