Badass(ish)

Jaymie Patricia Heilman

Book - 2023

"Three teens set out to stop a pipeline, but their secrets, anxieties, and one very obnoxious ex-boyfriend might just explode their friendship first. Reeling from an online HateStorm after she blamed Alberta's oil industry for a devastating forest re, Davis wades back into climate activism to impress her two new friends and win back her ex-boyfriend. The novel is told from the points of view of the three main characters: Davis' parents work for the oil company she is fighting against; Renzi knows what it's like when climate change strikes back when her grandparents' home in Puerto Rico is destroyed by hurricanes and Jae hasn't found the right moment to share the truth about her growing feelings for another girl.... Tripped up by family pressures and their own secrets and lies, the teens' anti-pipeline efforts may jeopardize their friendship and lose the people they love most unless they find their own ways to fight for what they believe in."--

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Heilman Jaymie
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Subjects
Genres
Young adult literature
Novels
Published
Vancouver, B.C., Canada : Ronsdale Press [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Jaymie Patricia Heilman (author)
Physical Description
259 pages ; 21 cm
Issued also in electronic formats
Audience
HL750L
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 258).
ISBN
9781553806899
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A lot can happen when young people take on the oil industry. Alberta teens Davis Klein-Mah, Renzi Chan Cruz, and Jae Schmidt are fighting to protect the environment and their community from an oil pipeline. Unfortunately, local people rely on the pipeline for employment, complicating their task. Various personal circumstances also affect the girls' involvement: Jae's mother is a lawyer for Haus Oil, Davis' parents are Haus Oil engineers, and Renzi is being pursued by Izzy Malone, a boy who's a vocal activist--and Davis' recent ex. The central characters are well-rounded, but they each deal with multiple issues that are not sufficiently developed. Davis struggles with PTSD after losing everything, including her beloved dog, in the Fort McMurray fire; she also endured a Twitter backlash for her environmental advocacy, and she struggles with the breakup with Izzy. Renzi is helping her abuelos in Puerto Rico, whose lives were devastated by hurricanes, and figuring out her feelings for Izzy. And Jae, who's falling for another girl and is self-conscious about her wealth, has a power-hungry mother who's oblivious to her daughter's passion for the environment. The teens' friendships and dedication are touching, but superfluous characters and multiple subplots detract from the power of the central storyline. Jae is white; Renzi is Chinese and Puerto Rican, and Davis is Chinese and implied white. A thought-provoking and relevant, if overstuffed, tale. (author's note, resources) (Fiction. 13-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.