Reviews

Honor Girl: A Graphic Memoir by Maggie Thrash

carlyxdeexx's review

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4.0

Wow, I devoured this book! I had no idea what I was getting into and the story is immediately relatable and engrossing. I loved how much the art style fit so particularly with the setting—it looked like it was drawn while away at summer camp by someone at age 15 or 16, and it really fits the powerfully nostalgic and authentic voice of the author (it’s a memoir after all). As a het from the NYC tri-state area who was sent to Grandma’s for the summer months instead of sleepaway camp, there was so much about this story that I have never experienced firsthand, yet the universal nature of growing up a cis girl cloistered among cis girls is so clear in this. The expectations, the performance of it all, the simultaneous truth and deception of vulnerability, the tumultuous nature and possessiveness of friendships. The horse girls. The boy bands. It’s all here.

It’s obvious how much good the supportive, positive characters in this story do in the sea of negative ones, making it all too clear how much one teen’s life can be impacted and changed by the people and peers in it. It’s also refreshing to see so much complexity in these campers, because being a teen is messy, and friendship doesn’t always have to be perfect to be sustaining. Friends can be annoying, abrasive, and jealous while still being loyal, compassionate, and understanding. That’s a very 14-year-old mood.

I hope a lot of people pick this book up like I did and end up surprised by it. It’s the kind of book that can be the thing that opens a person’s heart, and I hope that’s exactly what it has done for many, and will continue to do.

bookph1le's review

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4.0

I found this a compelling story about the heartbreak of first love, and of the confusion Thrash felt when grappling with her sexuality. I thought it did a very effective job of showing how casual homophobia permeates many corners of society, and how that contributed to Thrash's difficulties in coming to terms with how she felt.

jr2234's review

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4.0

I enjoyed this one. The story is a true retelling from Maggie’s life and takes place at a summer camp, which I enjoyed because it felt so immersive. I spent a big part of my high school years at a summer camp and loved every part of it, and parts of the camp took me back to that time (the obsession with counselors, the breaking of rules, etc). I enjoyed, too, how the end was cut short with Maggie’s love interest and how she didn’t get any definitive closure because that made the plot much more realistic.

violet_reads's review against another edition

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1.0

yikes. the art is bad, the story was meh, the age gap was yuck.

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odurant8's review

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4.0

A wonderful graphic novel that illustrates the pain and longing of first love, and the letdown when you discover that the object of your affections isn't perfect.

tonatyuh's review

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5.0

I loved this.

Yeah, no need to explain.

I just loved this.

ronniegayreads's review against another edition

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lighthearted medium-paced

3.0

Ngl I think I entirely missed the point, and the ending confused me.

alicebme's review against another edition

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4.0

Yup.

ktswings's review

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4.0

I know I like a not happy ending,but....
I don't know, maybe the age or vulnerability, or the comics...
(Pouts)

jane_carr's review

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emotional lighthearted reflective fast-paced

3.75