In Willis and Andelfinger’s graphic novel, a high schooler finds herself thrown inside her own fiction.
Brie Page just wants to get through high school being as invisible as possible so she can go home and write her stories, or listen to her podcast about writing, or think about writing. When her mother forces her out of the house to do “normal teen stuff,” Brie finds herself in front of a bookstore she’s never seen before. The very strange store owner’s name is Ambrose. When Brie confesses her teenage woes, Ambrose offers to let her buy a special pen that will supposedly help Brie in crafting her tales and escaping the real world. After fighting with her former friend Viv on the way home, Brie sits down with her new pen and starts to write three different stories, with hours passing in the blink of an eye. The next morning, Brie opens her locker at school to find a portal inside. Entering it takes her to another world with talking horses and a sorceress—and Brie herself is the queen. Knowing this is one of her yarns, Brie follows the plot, but it doesn’t quite go as she wrote it (“This was supposed to be the end of the story…and yet I’m still here!”). Hopping from one of her texts to the next, Brie starts to realize something is going on and changes her writing, pulling her family and friends into the madness. In this cleverly constructed graphic novel, Taylor and Marchbank use mostly black-and-white illustrations, switching to bright colors when Brie hops into her stories. With inspirational themes of standing up for yourself against bullies, taking charge of your own narrative, and finally finding a way to talk to your crush, this engaging story has something for everyone.
A teenager rewrites her story in this enchanting yarn.