Review by Kirkus Book Review
A Canadian high school senior grapples with life after graduation and his nuanced identity. Eighteen-year-old Adrian Carter is on the brink of greatness. He's graduating high school with honors; he earned a coveted scholarship; he's a youth mentor at the library; his multiracial friend group is supportive; and his punk rocker girlfriend, Melody Woods, loves him unconditionally. These are undisputed blessings in Adrian's life, so why does the future--and all its infinite possibilities--freak him out? Not only is Adrian struggling with how to talk to his parents about his past eating disorder, but he's hiding his decision to apply to Cape Breton University's community studies program, which he prefers to the business administration degree his father is pushing. When Mel asks Adrian to join her band on a national tour, he's torn. Although he's unsure about looming adulthood, the punk scene hasn't been welcoming to a sensitive Black introvert. As the summer surges ahead, Adrian begins to realize the quiet, radical power of letting go. In this stand-alone companion to Worthy of Love (2019), the lingering aftermath of Adrian's struggles with bulimia is carefully and empathetically explored, particularly the damaging consequences of his dad's toxic masculinity. Adrian and Mel's relationship is grounded in mutual respect, and they experience similar identity issues, as Mel is Asian Indian and implied White, and Adrian's parents are biracial (Black and White). An empowering journey of self-actualization and a look at the intimate bonds that shape a person. (Fiction. 13-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.