Boy21 by Matthew Quick
(Headline/Hachette)
PB RRP $16.99 EBook $9.99
ISBN: 9781 4722 1290 0
Reviewed by Hilary Smillie
PB RRP $16.99 EBook $9.99
ISBN: 9781 4722 1290 0
Reviewed by Hilary Smillie
Matthew Quick has embarked on a dark and quirky story set in a
poor North American town where drugs, filthy streets, and danger abounds.
Finley's life is no bed of roses. His mother died when he was just
a kid and he lives with his Dad and Pop, an invalid with no legs who
ever-mourns the loss of Finley's grandmother. He attends Bellmont High and the
highlights in his life are basketball and his girlfriend Erin who also attends
the school. She is a significant member of the girls' basketball team. Her
older brother Rod assumes the role of protector and has a fierce reputation
among the white and black residents of the town. The reader quickly gets the
impression that it is a place you only live in if you have no choice. Both
Finley and Erin have dreams of using their basketball prowess to give them
tickets out.
The Coach burdens Finley with the job of companion to recently
orphaned Russ, a high-profile high school basketball player from L.A. who copes
with his trauma by claiming to be a space alien, Boy21. Finley is given
information about Russ which he is not allowed to divulge to anyone. Finley speaks
very little in any case, due to his own negative experiences, but he is not
happy when he realises Russ plays his starting position in the basketball team.
Right now Russ does not want to play basketball and Finley has been tasked to
encourage him back into the game. If he is successful, he may have to forfeit
his place and number in the team as Russ is also number 21. Surely that is too
much to sacrifice.
Boy21 is an insight into lives that are
oppressed by shadows of the past and which threaten them still. But it also
shows how families battle along together and that some sacrifices are worth it.
Quick has tackled a number of emotional and external problems to reveal a deep
understanding of the way young people are affected by trauma and how friendship
can help turn things around. Finley and Russ's story reflects the concept of
keeping on in difficult circumstances and may encourage readers who are also
finding life impossible. Boy21 demonstrates that things are never
static; at some stage there is a breakthrough, often when you least expect it.
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