Reviews

Troublemakers by Catherine Barter

missusb21's review against another edition

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4.0

Fresh voice. A rare YA novel with no romance. Satisfying resolution.

booknerd85's review against another edition

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5.0

This book is amazing. I cried. All of the characters felt so real! This is quality writing!

slove's review against another edition

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5.0

Super beautiful moving book! Once I started I couldn’t put it down.

meganlouise815's review against another edition

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3.0

This has been on my TBR for ages and I'm glad I finally got to it. I enjoyed it more than I expected and found myself speeding through it.

curlyhairedbooklover's review

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5.0

It was wonderful and I really enjoyed it.

jennywithaz's review

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YALSA #BFYA2019 nominee; read review here: http://www.yalsa.ala.org/thehub/2018/12/10/bfya2019-nominees-round-december-10-edition/

megan7b386's review

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3.0

I received this free from the publishers via NetGalley

Alena never knew her political activist mother, who died when she was a baby. She has been looked after by her older half-brother Danny and his boyfriend Nick. They've acted like parents to Alena. When someone starts leaving bombs around London, the atmosphere and area are precarious. It is in this fearful situation that Alena starts to learn about her activist mother which causes tension at home, especially when Danny starts working for a controversial politician, which also causes problems between him and his boyfriend.

I thought Troublemakers was an okay read. I've been meaning to read UKYA a bit more for a while now, and when I saw this on NetGalley I was intrigued. I did enjoy it, but it didn't really have anything that actually WOW'd me. Troublemakers takes places in the East End of London, which I've heard is known for its poverty. Therefore, I feel like an opportunity was wasted to really discuss social issues and problems surrounding poverty and the working class of Britain. Poverty is really underrepresented in YA, especially UKYA and I do feel slightly let down that a book about Politics really doesn't seem to actually discuss politics much at all, especially in terms of the working class and social awareness etc.

I did enjoy the discussions it had about the system of politics. How people are becoming disengaged, and about the morality and integrity surrounding politics and political campaigns, which was an enjoyable aspect.

I did enjoy Alena as a protagonist. She was bratty, and angry, and argumentative, but also a realistic 15-year-old. She had some really good development throughout the book, learning about her past and her mother. I loved the sibling relationship between Alena and Danny, but Danny himself did grate on my nerves sometimes with how protective and dishonest he was sometimes. But their relationship was developed and complex and had some really good moving moments. I also really loved Nick and his relationship with Alena. He was a really good parental figure and I loved how kind and compassionate he was. My favourite thing about Troublemakers was definitely the relationships and watching them evolve, especially when Danny and Nick realised that Alena is not a child anymore, but a teenager who is curious and stubborn.

Troublemakers is a coming-of-age book about families, love, and lies.

ireadbooksnotminds's review

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4.0

Loved this. This was very much a ‘slice of life’ kind of story where nothing really exciting happens, rather, everything is realistic, but I never found myself getting bored. Alena was a convincing teenage character that Barter got just right—she wasn’t unbelievably naive but she wasn’t annoyingly precocious either. She was curious like any other 15-year-old teenage girl, wanting to understand the politics of a society she lived in, but there was still a lot she had yet to understand.

Danny and Nick made it so much better. I loved the diversity of their family set-up—Danny and his boyfriend Nick raising his little sister together—and the fact that them being a gay couple wasn’t all there was to their characters and their roles, although homophobia was a theme that was still discussed.

Truly an underrated 2017 release in UK YA.
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