Fight + flight Author: Machias, Jules | ||
Price: $22.38 |
Summary:
Two girls forge a much-needed friendship after experiencing a traumatic event at school and, together, learn to embrace their weaknesses in order to find their inner strengths.
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews (03/15/22)
School Library Journal (06/01/22)
Booklist (05/15/22)
Full Text Reviews:
School Library Journal - 06/01/2022 Gr 5 Up—Everyone has something going on, and some more than others. Athletic Avery has hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, a painful chronic condition that affects her joints. Sarah has anxiety and experiences panic attacks that she tries to manage by creating art. They both feel as if they are losing control, Avery of her body and Sarah of her mind. The alternating perspectives of these two well-developed characters allow readers realistic glimpses into the teenage mind. Avery is pansexual, has two moms (one who is trans), is going through physical therapy for a shoulder injury that keeps her from riding the bike that she loves, and has a bullied and biracial best friend with ADHD named Mason. Sarah is struggling in her core classes, carries heavy family obligations (having to care for her younger siblings), has an aunt who recently died causing her cousin/best friend to have to move away, and has a gay brother in a Catholic family. Avery and Sarah are brought together by an active shooter drill that the school administration run as if it were real. As a lovely friendship builds, deeper feelings develop and Sarah begins to question her religious upbringing. This is a unique, fast-paced novel with a lot going on and a lot to appreciate. However, it should come with some trigger warnings: chronic and mental illness, school shootings, homophobia, transphobia, racism, bullying, death and loss, to name a few. VERDICT A solid, character-driven choice for libraries that tackles tough topics with skill and nuance.—Claire Covington - Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.
Booklist - 05/15/2022 Machias (Both Can Be True, 2021) weaves identities with nuance and complexity in their latest, in which Avery, who is living with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, and Sarah, who struggles with anxiety, begin a friendship—and maybe something more—in the wake of a school-shooting drill taken too far. While Avery leans into her tendency to fight, Sarah focuses on prayer as they both attempt to manage their personal challenges and their shared distress over the drill. In addition to deftly navigating Sarah’s mental health struggles and Avery’s physical disability, Machias thoughtfully portrays characters who are cis and trans, gay and straight, and from different religious and racial backgrounds. They also employ a clever metaphorical device in the book's accompanying illustrations, which show Sarah’s growth, in particular, through her journal and art. Excellent, if slightly lengthy, this is a recommendation for readers who enjoyed Sharon Draper's Out of My Mind (2010). - Copyright 2022 Booklist.