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dark
emotional
sad
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
Went from feeling neutral about this series and not remembering any of the plot or characters to becoming a hardcore AFTG fan in the span of 3 hours. I just loved the entire premise of this book and the character dynamics were adorable. Jean's POV was so well-written, and he is a precious bean and must be protected at all costs (and also reminded soo much of Seiji from Fence which is definitely why I liked him). Also, only a fictional character could be named Jeremy Knox and be a literal ray of sunshine. Obsessed with Cat and Laila being Jean's lesbian mums and currently living for them and Jerejean, I even dreamed about them when I fell asleep after staying up till 1am to finish this. WHAT did Nora Sakavic put in this book? This made reading the previous 3 books worth it lol
dark
emotional
slow-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
i keep foolishly thinking nothing can be as traumatising as the first 3 books. nothing can be as bad as what happened to andrew and neil over those 3 horrific books but nora really came in with 10x the trauma and dumped it ALLLLLL on jean
The Sunshine Court caught me completely by surprise – I forgot Sakavic was planning on a fourth book in the All for the Game universe, and I found out about it just days before it was released. This installment picks up shortly before the ending of AFTG, taking us into the world of former Raven and Edgar Allan University student Jean Moreau. After transferring to USC’s Exy team and partnering up with the Trojans’ captain Jeremy Knox (another fantastic POV we get here that we haven’t seen before), Jean has to unlearn everything the Ravens taught him, and come to terms with the fact that the abuse he suffered for years was not something that he deserved. He is Jean Moreau, but he is so much more than just a former Raven.
Spoilers for the original AFTG trilogy ahead.
The plot of this book is very mellow – it’s less of a real plot and more of just “people doing things as time progresses.” I really enjoyed it, though, because it allowed for more focus on who we’re really all here for: Jean and Jeremy. Jean is a very complex character who has suffered immense trauma and abuse at the hands of Riko and his Raven teammates. It’s clear that Sakavic has done her research on cult-inflicted trauma, because it is something that Jean fights with throughout the entire book and is nowhere near easily dismissed. He can only move through it with the help of a new environment and, for the first time in his life, friends – as well as finally succumbing, as everyone does, to sessions with Betsy Dobson.
Jeremy is one such friend, and god, do I absolutely love him. In the shadow of the Foxes and the Ravens, it’s hard to take the Trojans seriously and believe that their good-naturedness is real. Once you see Jeremy, though, that reality is a given. He’s such a sweetheart, and cares so much about his teammates and their wellbeing. When Jean comes into the picture, Jeremy has to delicately balance Jean’s privacy and traumatic past with the urge to get him to see that what happened to him was wrong on so many levels. The two form a relationship that is unexpected yet incredibly tender, and that relationship encompasses both characters’ strengths and weaknesses very well.
The references to AFTG were a delight, and I loved seeing the events of AFTG played out through another person’s perspective. Seeing a totally normal person like Jeremy reacting to things like Riko breaking Kevin’s hand was so interesting because it shows just how insane the world of the Foxes and Ravens is. It’s a perspective that you sort of lose when you’re reading AFTG – you get so immersed in it that you’re like “yeah, this is normal,” and then you read this and you’re like “no, wait, this is actually psychotic.”
Overall, The Sunshine Court works really well as a new addition to one of my favorite series. It links enough to AFTG that it feels familiar, yet its characters and setting are unique and help it stand strong as its own new story rather than just a fan-service continuation of the OG group. There are a ton of new LGBTQ+ characters, including an adorable look into the lives of Laila and Cat, two Trojans who we briefly saw during the Palmetto/USC game. There were a few plot points, such as Jeremy’s family history, that I would have loved to see resolved just out of curiosity, but it’s just as well – it leaves Sakavic an excuse to write #5!
Spoilers for the original AFTG trilogy ahead.
The plot of this book is very mellow – it’s less of a real plot and more of just “people doing things as time progresses.” I really enjoyed it, though, because it allowed for more focus on who we’re really all here for: Jean and Jeremy. Jean is a very complex character who has suffered immense trauma and abuse at the hands of Riko and his Raven teammates. It’s clear that Sakavic has done her research on cult-inflicted trauma, because it is something that Jean fights with throughout the entire book and is nowhere near easily dismissed. He can only move through it with the help of a new environment and, for the first time in his life, friends – as well as finally succumbing, as everyone does, to sessions with Betsy Dobson.
Jeremy is one such friend, and god, do I absolutely love him. In the shadow of the Foxes and the Ravens, it’s hard to take the Trojans seriously and believe that their good-naturedness is real. Once you see Jeremy, though, that reality is a given. He’s such a sweetheart, and cares so much about his teammates and their wellbeing. When Jean comes into the picture, Jeremy has to delicately balance Jean’s privacy and traumatic past with the urge to get him to see that what happened to him was wrong on so many levels. The two form a relationship that is unexpected yet incredibly tender, and that relationship encompasses both characters’ strengths and weaknesses very well.
The references to AFTG were a delight, and I loved seeing the events of AFTG played out through another person’s perspective. Seeing a totally normal person like Jeremy reacting to things like Riko breaking Kevin’s hand was so interesting because it shows just how insane the world of the Foxes and Ravens is. It’s a perspective that you sort of lose when you’re reading AFTG – you get so immersed in it that you’re like “yeah, this is normal,” and then you read this and you’re like “no, wait, this is actually psychotic.”
Spoiler
Something I still don’t know how I feel about are the parallels between Jean and, surprisingly, Andrew. Plot-wise, it feels somewhat repetitive (once you’ve read the book, you’ll know what I’m talking about). Reading those parts, I thought “oh, I’ve read this before,” and it’s rough material to read twice, to the point where you wonder if it’s really necessary. That being said, after finishing the book, I understand why it was there. Not only does it give us some very important backstory on Jean, but for me, it shed some light on who Andrew is as well. We never got Andrew’s POV in AFTG, so seeing what Jean goes through gives us a clue as to what Andrew may have been feeling throughout his own trauma, and there are some heartbreaking connections made in Jean’s inner monologue that absolutely gutted me.Overall, The Sunshine Court works really well as a new addition to one of my favorite series. It links enough to AFTG that it feels familiar, yet its characters and setting are unique and help it stand strong as its own new story rather than just a fan-service continuation of the OG group. There are a ton of new LGBTQ+ characters, including an adorable look into the lives of Laila and Cat, two Trojans who we briefly saw during the Palmetto/USC game. There were a few plot points, such as Jeremy’s family history, that I would have loved to see resolved just out of curiosity, but it’s just as well – it leaves Sakavic an excuse to write #5!
4/2025
nvm this shit is laced. was worried i was gonna be sorta indifferent again / have the same hang ups but i did NOT. idc anymore that its obvious to me this was written a decade latter, i need jean to accept his found family and i need him to do it NOW!!!!
theres so many damn trojans still who are you people
--
5/2024
never expected there to be more books in this series... we are so back
even though tsc did not immediately worm its way into my brain the way that aftg did, im still invested and interested to see where it goes from here. the outsider perspective on preexisting characters is Doing things to me, and its fun to see canon be given to other characters that have mainly existed in fandom for years
nvm this shit is laced. was worried i was gonna be sorta indifferent again / have the same hang ups but i did NOT. idc anymore that its obvious to me this was written a decade latter, i need jean to accept his found family and i need him to do it NOW!!!!
theres so many damn trojans still who are you people
--
5/2024
never expected there to be more books in this series... we are so back
even though tsc did not immediately worm its way into my brain the way that aftg did, im still invested and interested to see where it goes from here. the outsider perspective on preexisting characters is Doing things to me, and its fun to see canon be given to other characters that have mainly existed in fandom for years
why is everyone gay and why would I genuinely give up both my lungs for Jean Moreau
adventurous
dark
emotional
tense
fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Yes
Diverse cast of characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
oh its adorable! oh it’s traumatised.
emotional
tense
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
jean moreau <3