Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Musician Violet's edgy debut spotlights art and queer identity through a teenage keyboardist's turbulent introduction to the 1990s Hollywood music scene. Whenever she feels overwhelmed by her mother's concerning PTSD-induced nightmares and flashbacks, 18-year-old Kyla Bell escapes via composing and performing music to take her "far away from reality." After a gig in her rural Massachusetts hometown nets an invitation to tour with her rock star idol, Ruby Sky, Kyla drops out of high school and moves to L.A. There, straight-shooting, middle-aged music producer Robert Jeffs facilitates her "rock star boot camp makeover," during which she's encouraged to diet and take up smoking in order to fit the mold. She soon flounders under pressure from Robert and "walking landmine" Ruby, with whom Kyla is falling in love. As fissures appear beneath her new associates' picture-perfect personae, Kyla fears her ticket to stardom might end up breaking her. Violet persuasively develops a vivid setting that epitomizes Kyla's dreams and aspirations, while also providing light fodder for discussion surrounding personal agency, and complexly rendered relationships ground this wish-fulfilling love letter to rock music and the whirlwind of fame. Characters read as white. Ages 14--up. Agent: Devon Halliday, Transatlantic Agency. (Apr.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
Eighteen-year-old Kyla moves to Los Angeles to pursue her dreams of rock stardom. Kyla, a White girl from Western Massachusetts, is discovered when a musician hears her playing piano in a local restaurant and asks her to open for his band, which is touring the area and needs a replacement for the original act that had to cancel. Ruby Sky, a Courtney Love--esque singer Kyla loves, sees her performance and asks Kyla to move to LA to join her band. However, Kyla needs rock-star bootcamp before she's ready. In a matter of days, she is immersed in the nonstop party life of 1990s LA. The nostalgia is on point without being heavy-handed, but the plot feels incomplete, so the magic wears off before long. Readers will spend the whole time waiting for the many Chekhov's guns to go off, but most never do. Eating disorders, drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, and predatory men simply provide the set dressing. There is a little more development given to Kyla's discovery of her sexuality; though it remains unlabeled, she does come to accept that she is attracted to women. For all the experiences Kyla goes through, from her barely believable, dream-come-true discovery to her decision to follow her love of music no matter what it brings, more is needed to take this book from a series of anecdotes to a robust story. An evocative '90s vignette without a strong plot to carry it. (Fiction. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.