The pay-back girls

Alex Travis

Book - 2025

"Why get over your cheating ex when you can get even? ... His first mistake was underestimating them. Senior year is going to be perfect. Meghan won't settle for anything less. She's already crushing her classes and dating the star of the basketball team. Nate's friends have been less than welcoming, but it's never easy being one of the only Black kids at a mostly white prep school. Still, Meghan did not expect the scene at pep rally. Robin and Bria dated Nate too. Correction: are dating him. He never broke up with them, and Meghan is furious. When Nate is found bloodied and unconscious in the locker room after the big game, suddenly the three teens are prime suspects--and a tenuous alliance may be the only way to c...lear their names. Except Meghan doesn't remember everything that happened that night, and she's starting to have feelings for one of the exes. One thing is for sure: the more clues they uncover, the more Meghan, Bria, and Robin each look responsible..."--

Saved in:
1 being processed

Young Adult New Shelf Show me where

YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Travis, Alex
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Young Adult New Shelf YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Travis, Alex (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Meghan, a scholarship student at Burke High School and one of a handful of Black students, is constantly bullied and harassed by her boyfriend Nate's friends. Nate is the star of the basketball team, and his friends think that Meghan is "the wrong Black girl" for Nate. They also weaponize secrets from her past to bully her. Things turn tenuous when Meghan finds out that Nate never actually broke up with his two ex-girlfriends, Robin and Bria. The three girls couldn't be more different. Robin is a star athlete--the cocaptain of the field hockey team. Bria is the polished, outspoken, and focused school council president (not to mention openly hostile toward Meghan). Still, they form a tentative alliance to get revenge on Nate. But then Nate is assaulted and in a coma, with three potential weapons nearby, each pointing to one of the girls. They shift their alliance to finding out who hurt Nate. Meghan, the first-person narrator, is engaging and bright, and the plot is tightly written. Avid mystery and thriller readers will gobble this one up.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

After Black high school senior Meghan Landry discovers her popular, self-described biracial basketball star boyfriend Nate Walker has been secretly cheating on her with field hockey captain Robin Ellison and student government president Bria Kelly--the only two other Black girls in their grade--the three team up to teach him a lesson. But the trio become prime suspects when a vicious attack in the boys' locker room leaves Nate bloodied and unconscious in the hospital. Then an anonymous social media account starts spilling the girls' secrets. As more about Nate's checkered romantic history comes to light, Meghan, Robin, and Bria must find a way to put aside their differences and trust one another if they want to find his attacker and clear their names. In this edgy thriller riff on John Tucker Must Die, Travis (The Only Black Girl in the Room, for adults) briefly touches on themes of racism, economic inequality, queerness, intimate partner violence, and PTSD. Despite surface-level characterization and somewhat implausible plot twists, the dramatic tragicomedy's soapy atmosphere and the execution of Meghan and Robin's developing romance prove entertaining. Ages 14--up. Agent: Dorian Maffei, Kimberley Cameron & Assoc. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

After their cheating boyfriend ends up in a coma, three girls team up to avoid an attempted murder rap. Scholarship student Meghan Landry hoped senior year at a new school would be different, but even as star basketball player Nate Walker's girlfriend, she's friendless and a target of racist attacks. Meghan is happy with Nate, however, until a pep rally brawl reveals that he's three-timing her with his supposed exes, the only other Black girls in their class, Robin Ellison and Bria Kelly (Nate is "half-Black" and identifies as biracial). After an attack leaves Nate in a coma, the three girls, initially wary of each other, must work together when they become the investigation's prime suspects. But the appearance of a newGossip Girl-esque Instagram account leaves all three doubtful whom they can trust. Travis prioritizes drama to the detriment of plot, characterization, logic, and the exploration of the heavy and important topics the story introduces. Meghan and Robin explore a potential relationship with one another while Meghan weighs staying with Nate, but both these threads are underdeveloped. Themes of PTSD, intimate partner violence, gender, and race are also underexplored in this unevenly paced work that crosses several genres. The author attempts to shine a critical light on the racism Black women experience, but she does so with a heavy hand, flattening Black and white characters alike into stereotypes and missing nuances within the spectrum of Blackness. Well-intentioned but undermined by a lack of depth and focus.(Thriller. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.