Reviews tagging 'Outing'

Home Field Advantage by Dahlia Adler

17 reviews

sunnivab's review

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challenging emotional hopeful inspiring medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

4.0


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gabstersreads's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful inspiring medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

I really enjoyed this book! It took a little bit to pick up pase but about 20% in I was hooked! The author does a really good job of writing dual perspective and both the MCs have a distinct voice. 
This book does heavily center around homophobia, sexism, and bullying.  At times it was difficult to read about the intense bullying Jack was facing. She faced a lot of homophobia and sexism so I would avoid this book if that triggers you. 
I absolutely loved the ending and I felt it was very hopeful and satisfying while still addressing the ingrained homophobia in a conservative environment. 
Highly recommend!  

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beffynicole's review against another edition

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emotional funny medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

Thank you to NetGalley, Dahlia Adler & Wednesday Books for an advanced copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!

I got home from Pride, sunburnt and fully expecting to pass out when I decided to pick up this book to read before bed. Cue me reading the entire book in one sitting, not even moving, and staying up way too late before work!

Despite that, I probably would have rated this book lower if it wasn’t about being queer. There were some parts that hit me really hard as a queer person who has struggled with religious trauma and that relatability definitely brought the score up.

I highly suggest that readers view the trigger warnings before reading this book because it definitely wasn’t a bundle of queer joy.

Home Field Advantage follows Amber, a high school cheerleader from a small-town vying to become captain, but she’s also got a secret – she’s polysexual. She’s been fine not having crushes on any of the Atherton High School kids, waiting until college until she can be out and free. That is, until the new quarterback, Jack, shows up.

After the fatal car crash involving Robbie, Atherton’s former quarterback, Jack Walsh becomes the high school’s first female football player – which already would make waves but on top of that, Jack is very obviously a lesbian, and the team feels like she is “taking” the quarterback position away from the guys on the team while trampling over Robbie’s legacy. 

Amber and Jack navigate their attraction, social relationships, at times conflicting motivations, and small-town bigotry. 

All in all, I did enjoy this book, but I do think there were a lot of issues that would have led me to rate this lower if it wasn’t queer and tugging at parts of my heart. 



PROS:

I think the details on other queer characters not wanting to out other queer characters were perfect. A lot of times the media will portray a queer person as being upset that another queer person doesn’t want to come out. To me, this is completely the opposite because we all know that coming out can be hard and dangerous. Many of us wouldn’t hold it against someone, even if we decide that’s not a life we can personally choose for ourselves.

Adler does a great job of using Amber not wanting to come out as a great plot point, while also making it clear that her friends would have been okay with that if she had just been honest about it instead of lying to both of them.

The queer representation wasn’t limited to the two main characters. Obviously Amber and Jack are sapphic, but Amber has an openly bisexual mom, and a best guy friend, Miguel, who is gay and has a boyfriend. Miguel gets A LOT of page time for a side character. On top of that, Jack has a friend who is asexual (and aromantic maybe?) and another who uses they/them pronouns.

The conversation on not making someone out to be a saint just because they died was decently done. I think this is a hard topic to talk about and not one that everyone agrees with, but I still commend the author for addressing it. I don’t think it was perfect, but this is something that a lot of queer (and other marginalized) people can understand. There are people who have hurt us or continued to support our oppression and we don’t always feel like commemorating their deaths. In fact, some might celebrate. 

There are also times that someone is being praised or glorified, dead or alive, who have hurt us, and we can’t say anything about it. This was something that especially rang true to me. We are not always safe to speak up about who caused us pain and it’s always a slap in the face to see people praising them. 

CONS: 

Atherton felt like a movie version of a small town. You know the kind, where the person hasn’t actually lived in a small town and this is what they expect the high school and bigotry to be like. I grew up in a homophobic small town riddled with religious bigotry and misogyny. Two actually. There were several times I had to force myself to suspend belief because the characterization just wasn’t fully realistic. A lot of the words and language from the bigots felt more like shock value than what would actually be said.

It can be bad and dangerous; it just presents itself differently.

There were more points that just weren’t believable. A lot of times I just had to force myself to go “it’s a story, it’s already fake so what’s a little more.” I don’t want to have to argue with myself to continue reading the book. One specific example was the football coach not realizing the boys were throwing the game. I mean, come on, if they aren’t good at keeping it a secret from Jack, I doubt they’re good at being sneaky. Especially if they aren’t good at football, they’re not going to be good at faking losing subtly. That does take skill – to know how to fail subtly.

And yeah, adults aren’t always great, but you’re seriously telling me that Amber never went to her mom? Who would absolutely advocate for her especially because she’s bi and would have fought for Jack to be respected as a queer person? No one tried talking to the cheer coach or football coach…At all? Not even give the coach a heads up that they wanted to throw the game BEFORE the game so he could keep an eye on it?

For all the author’s commentary on misogyny, I think she unintentionally writes misogynistic characterizations of women. Every girl in this book except Amber and Jack are written to be completely misogynistic stereotypes of the mean girl airheaded cheerleaders. I think there were better ways to use them as bullies without writing them as completely one-dimensional and almost putting down the fact that they decided to participate in traditional femininity.

The way Jack talks about the cheerleaders, even Amber, is misogynistic too. I don’t think this was fully resolved on Jack’s end just because she ended up with Amber.

This book is heavy. Not physically – no, it’s actually a short read. But I was not prepared for how many topics were going to be touched on this. I honestly thought from the description that this was going to be way more lighthearted than it was. I fully expected misogyny and fear of homophobia to be a theme but this was... a lot. I think if I hadn’t just come back from my own local Pride and celebrated myself, this would have put me in a rut for a couple of days.

This is just as much a romance as it is a political commentary and a story on queer trauma, misogyny, and religious bigotry. I don’t think addressing these things are bad, but there was just one thing after another, and I really felt unprepared for the level of bigotry when I thought it would be romance-focused.

Really EVERYONE at Atherton but Amber, Jack, and Miguel were assholes? This book was lonely. I really wish the author had written a little bit more about some of the characters who started warming up towards the end, like Nia.

Some of the writing felt juvenile to me. I read Cool for the Summer by Dahlia Adler a week or so ago and while the topics in that book weren’t as heavy, the writing felt more advanced and those characters had more depth. I think an attempt was made to give Jack, Amber, and even Miguel depth, but I think this book was too short to do that properly. I knew their motivations, but mostly because it was written in plain print. It was stated not shown. 

And the amount of verbiage used to describe Amber and Jack’s physical attributes and… nothing else was a bit much. With a book this short, these sentences are valuable and could have been used in more productive ways, like expanding on Jack and Amber’s relationship instead of it going from 0, to 10, to 100? There also were a lot of repeated phrases.


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savvyrosereads's review against another edition

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funny hopeful inspiring lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0

Out June 7, 2022 [Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with an eARC in exchange for an honest review!]

Rating: 4/5 stars

When the star quarterback of Atherton High dies in a drunk driving accident, no one expects his replacement to be Jack—short for Jaclyn—Walsh. Aspiring cheer captain Amber McCloud is as surprised as the rest of the student body—and her quickly developing feelings for Jack only complicate matters thanks to increasing pressure to choose between her squad and the person she wants to be with—as well as the person she wants to be.

This has been one of my most-anticipated reads for ages, and it was the absolutely perfect way to kick off Pride Month. The romance was adorable and the plot was perfectly mixed amounts of high school drama and feel-good sports story. I was initially pretty annoyed with Amber—though I also felt for the complexity of her situation and her very valid fears—but in the end she deeply impressed me as a tough and clever character, as did Jack, who can only reasonably be described as a badass. I was glued to my seat for the final few chapters, and my only real complaint is that the book was too short—and I mean this in both a figurative “I didn’t want to stop reading” way (because I didn’t) and a literal “I wish there was an epilogue or another short chapter” way (because I do).

I desperately hope there is a sequel or spin-off or bonus content or all of the above in our future, because I really want to revisit this world and these characters. But for now, do yourself a favor and go grab this one as soon as it releases next week.

Recommended to anyone, but especially if you like: YA LGBTQ romance; sports romances; small town high school drama.

CW: Homophobia; lesbophobia; misogyny; outing; car accident;
pregnancy loss
.

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brokenbodybitch's review against another edition

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4.5

Their quarterback dies in a car accident and is replaced by the new kid Jack Walsh, Jack happens to be short for Jacklyn and having a girl replace their fav QB is a huge task. Jack's team and the cheerleaders are mad and try to take her down at all costs, Amber, a cheerleader aiming for captain next year tries to calm tension, her team mates make it clear that she will lose cheer captain if she helps jack.....the problem with that Jack and Amber are falling in love. 

     I WISH I HAD THIS IN HIGH SCHOOL!!!! this was the sapphic cheerleader and QB romance I was dying for when I was younger and I was genuinely sad for this book to end; Natalie Naudus and Lori Prince did a fantastic job with the chemistry between the two characters and I thoroughly enjoyed how they brought them to life (I loved Natalie already). I didn't really get into any of the sports/cheer/popular kid scene in high school because of ✨bullying✨ so I was that kid who read all the books about the popular and cool kids to see what the 'ideal' high school experience is like and this was my fav trope so when I saw this on NetGalley i knew i NEEDED it. It defiantly lived up to the hype! It was fantastic writing and an adorable story.

    Amber identifies as polysexual which I absolutely loved seeing a micro-label talked about, I generally really enjoyed the queer rep in this book; a line in particular I loved is when Jack talks about how amazing it was to hear Ambers mom mentioning being queer so casually. Ambers mom says something about having a bi bob and I know its a small thing but i totally would've picked up on that too, especially when i was younger seeing adults be queer casually was such a big thing and i loved that it was added in. the dynamics between Amber, Jack, and Miguel and them with their teams/other cheerleaders was also done well, although I do wish there was a bit more from the storyline between Amber and Cara(?I don't know spelling it was the audiobook), I think I would have enjoyed them discussing how Cara played into the bullying and hate the three of them faced a bit more, but it also isn't enough of a complaint for me to even think of lowering the rating.

This was such a beautiful story of queer love with the popular cheerleader and football QB trope done perfectly, and I cant recommend it more. Especially the audio book Natalie Naudus and Lori Prince crushed this!

*I received this as an audiobook arc from NetGalley, but these are my un-influenced thoughts*


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brokenbodybitch's review

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fast-paced

5.0

Their quarterback dies in a car accident and is replaced by the new kid Jack Walsh, Jack happens to be short for Jacklyn and having a girl replace their fav QB is a huge task. Jack's team and the cheerleaders are mad and try to take her down at all costs, Amber, a cheerleader aiming for captain next year tries to calm tension, her team mates make it clear that she will lose cheer captain if she helps jack.....the problem with that Jack and Amber are falling in love. 

     I WISH I HAD THIS IN HIGH SCHOOL!!!! this was the sapphic cheerleader and QB romance I was dying for when I was younger and I was genuinely sad for this book to end; Natalie Naudus and Lori Prince did a fantastic job with the chemistry between the two characters and I thoroughly enjoyed how they brought them to life (I loved Natalie already). I didn't really get into any of the sports/cheer/popular kid scene in high school because of ✨bullying✨ so I was that kid who read all the books about the popular and cool kids to see what the 'ideal' high school experience is like and this was my fav trope so when I saw this on NetGalley i knew i NEEDED it. It defiantly lived up to the hype! It was fantastic writing and an adorable story.

    Amber identifies as polysexual which I absolutely loved seeing a micro-label talked about, I generally really enjoyed the queer rep in this book; a line in particular I loved is when Jack talks about how amazing it was to hear Ambers mom mentioning being queer so casually. Ambers mom says something about having a bi bob and I know its a small thing but i totally would've picked up on that too, especially when i was younger seeing adults be queer casually was such a big thing and i loved that it was added in. the dynamics between Amber, Jack, and Miguel and them with their teams/other cheerleaders was also done well, although I do wish there was a bit more from the storyline between Amber and Cara(?I don't know spelling it was the audiobook), I think I would have enjoyed them discussing how Cara
played into the bullying and hate the three of them faced
 a bit more, but it also isn't enough of a complaint for me to even think of lowering the rating.

This was such a beautiful story of queer love with the popular cheerleader and football QB trope done perfectly, and I cant recommend it more. Especially the audio book Natalie Naudus and Lori Prince crushed this!

*I received this as an audiobook arc from NetGalley, but these are my un-influenced thoughts*

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foreverinastory's review

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emotional medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

Thank you to Wednesday Books & Netgalley for an eARC in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

4.5/5

This one was so good!!

Rep: white polysexual-questioning female MC, white gender non-conforming (butch) female lesbian MC, Latine questioning-achillean male side character, Black female side character, white nonbinary side character, various BIPOC side characters (ethnicity/race not indicated).

CWs: General queerphobia/queermisia, bullying, misogyny/toxic masculinity, threatened outing of side character/blackmailing, religious bigotry, sexism. Moderate: discussions of abortion, pregnancy and miscarriage, alcohol consumption, fatal car accident from DUI, child death, death, grief, violence.
 

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