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A review by bekahpaige
Dogknife by Liam Rodgers
4.0
*I received a free copy of this book by the author in exchange for an honest review*
This was a quick and mesmerizing read that I managed to devour in pretty much one sitting. The author tells the tale of a 17-year-old girl growing up on the streets of Nottingham UK during the 90's. It is told in the young girl's voice with lots of slang. I am not from there, so I cannot attest to the authenticity, but it seemed legit to me and the prose was easy to read. It is an interesting tale of a life of poverty, generational drug abuse, crime, and violence and how that effects the choices this young girl makes. Given the fact the author is male, he was able to write pretty convincingly from the female perspective without being patronizing or way off base.
I am not sure if the author's purpose is to give us a glimpse into the realities of life for this girl, to make social commentary, or to try and promote change. If it is the first one, then he succeeded. That being said, I had a hard time feeling sorry for and connecting with the main character. Her life is pretty bad and there are some injustices definitely thrown her way, but she also makes terrible choices and seems like an antisocial narcissist.
Not being from England and written from the main character's voice, there is little explanation for those not familiar with the UK's social policies. I was confused as to the hostel all the teenage characters were living in. Does the UK let teenage runaways, drug users, prostitutes, gang members and criminals live in free housing and run amok doing all the drugs they want and committing crimes? The main character also appeared to have access to free education, which she outright rejects, and had stable access to employment, which she also rejects. She instead chooses the thrill of prostitution, non stop drug use, petty crime, and violence, which she admits she finds a rush. Her mom is a heroin addict that still seems to love her but she has no real attachment to her mother or her sisters, which are barely mentioned. She thinks she is going to be a famous rich white rapper one day. Her friendships also seem shallow and more about impressing or intimidating people than any real connection. Even at the end she has a very cavalier attitude about crime or violating other's rights, including thinking people shouldn't go to jail just for stealing from shops. She is violent throughout the book in a way that is quite disturbing and in my opinion, went way beyond a need for justice but instead a sick pleasure and power in harming people. Finally her big turn-around in the book seems to be a reaction to finally facing actual consequences for her behavior and not wanting to spend her life locked up, rather than any real guilt or change of heart over her past or current behaviors. She only cries after she is in trouble. This thug life wasn't working for her any more, so she quit it. That is at least a motivation towards moving in the right direction, but she still comes across as antisocial and dangerous to me. She also seems shocked that she received FOUR years for kidnapping and purposefully carving up a man with a knife to permanently disfigure and traumatize but not kill him. Yes, the man was a rapist and the rapist got off, but that was still pretty sick. Maybe I just cannot separate from my US upbringing, but homeless teenagers(almost adults) in the US do not get to live in free housing and our prisons are a lot worse than what this girl described here (I was LMAO when she was whining about not getting milk and having to eat her cereal dry while in jail) and I am pretty sure her sentence would be harsher.
Honestly, I think the story of Boo Boo Girl and her recovery and survival from the rape would have been the more interesting one here.
Overall, a gritty look at a culture that I was not very familiar with, well-written and interesting. I recommend this author to others and look forward to seeing more of his future work!
This was a quick and mesmerizing read that I managed to devour in pretty much one sitting. The author tells the tale of a 17-year-old girl growing up on the streets of Nottingham UK during the 90's. It is told in the young girl's voice with lots of slang. I am not from there, so I cannot attest to the authenticity, but it seemed legit to me and the prose was easy to read. It is an interesting tale of a life of poverty, generational drug abuse, crime, and violence and how that effects the choices this young girl makes. Given the fact the author is male, he was able to write pretty convincingly from the female perspective without being patronizing or way off base.
I am not sure if the author's purpose is to give us a glimpse into the realities of life for this girl, to make social commentary, or to try and promote change. If it is the first one, then he succeeded. That being said, I had a hard time feeling sorry for and connecting with the main character. Her life is pretty bad and there are some injustices definitely thrown her way, but she also makes terrible choices and seems like an antisocial narcissist.
Not being from England and written from the main character's voice, there is little explanation for those not familiar with the UK's social policies. I was confused as to the hostel all the teenage characters were living in. Does the UK let teenage runaways, drug users, prostitutes, gang members and criminals live in free housing and run amok doing all the drugs they want and committing crimes? The main character also appeared to have access to free education, which she outright rejects, and had stable access to employment, which she also rejects. She instead chooses the thrill of prostitution, non stop drug use, petty crime, and violence, which she admits she finds a rush. Her mom is a heroin addict that still seems to love her but she has no real attachment to her mother or her sisters, which are barely mentioned. She thinks she is going to be a famous rich white rapper one day. Her friendships also seem shallow and more about impressing or intimidating people than any real connection. Even at the end she has a very cavalier attitude about crime or violating other's rights, including thinking people shouldn't go to jail just for stealing from shops. She is violent throughout the book in a way that is quite disturbing and in my opinion, went way beyond a need for justice but instead a sick pleasure and power in harming people. Finally her big turn-around in the book seems to be a reaction to finally facing actual consequences for her behavior and not wanting to spend her life locked up, rather than any real guilt or change of heart over her past or current behaviors. She only cries after she is in trouble. This thug life wasn't working for her any more, so she quit it. That is at least a motivation towards moving in the right direction, but she still comes across as antisocial and dangerous to me. She also seems shocked that she received FOUR years for kidnapping and purposefully carving up a man with a knife to permanently disfigure and traumatize but not kill him. Yes, the man was a rapist and the rapist got off, but that was still pretty sick. Maybe I just cannot separate from my US upbringing, but homeless teenagers(almost adults) in the US do not get to live in free housing and our prisons are a lot worse than what this girl described here (I was LMAO when she was whining about not getting milk and having to eat her cereal dry while in jail) and I am pretty sure her sentence would be harsher.
Honestly, I think the story of Boo Boo Girl and her recovery and survival from the rape would have been the more interesting one here.
Overall, a gritty look at a culture that I was not very familiar with, well-written and interesting. I recommend this author to others and look forward to seeing more of his future work!