Book Review: Making Friends with Alice Dyson

Our intern Jessica Hartman reviews debut author Poppy Nwosu’s Making Friends With Alice Dyson, the first in Wakefield Press’s dedicated Young Adult Fiction list led by Margot Lloyd.

Making Friends with Alice Dyson CVR V6.indd

 

Whilst reading this text I have fallen in love with, become exasperated by, and completely related to Alice Dyson, the protagonist Poppy Nwosu has so artfully created. The text delves into issues of social anxiety, peer pressure and bullying, self-identity, the feeling of being trapped on a path that you are unsure that you want to go down, and the ability to be brave and be yourself in the face of all of it. And of course, young love.

The catalyst of the plot revolves around one Teddy Taualai, who in his endeavour to enter Alice Dyson’s life upsets the balance with her friend May, her relationship with her demanding parents, and Alice’s carefully-planned future.

 

Throughout the novel Poppy threads through brilliant one liners that give her characters and their struggles an achingly realistic relatability. The characters practically jump off the page. It is these one liners that are both humorous but also incredibly real, that allow her to tackle hard issues like bullying in such a way that feels less like you are being lectured rather than you are getting a glimpse behind the curtain of adolescence.

But I do decide I need to do something. May holds her head high every day even when she’s bullied… and it makes me want to be brave too.

Alice’s personal growth is the shining light of the story, and her commitment to her own feelings and desires, while flawed, feels incredibly real. Her relationship with Teddy Tauali is awkward and gentle and incredibly genuine, and Teddy’s character is the sort of person many readers will find themselves wishing they had a chance to meet. This is a beautiful, tender story about endeavouring to be true – to your friends, to your family, but most importantly, to yourself.

View Wakefield Press’s other Young Adult Titles here and here. Stay tuned for an interview with Jessica, coming soon!

A lovely review of Kate Strohm’s Siblings

I think this book is a revelation. It has shone light to a lifetime of feelings and emotions that I could never really make sense of, until now.

For anyone who has considered reading Kate Strohm’s wonderful book, Siblings:

<em>Siblings</em>

 

By Joe Cole (Phoenix Society):

I think this book is a revelation. It has shone light to a lifetime of feelings and emotions that I could never really make sense of, until now.

One of the many things that is to be greatly admired about this book is its truly honest account of the family experience in living with a child who has disabilities. Society inverts so much attention to the spiritual benefits of having a child with disabilities in the family, that it often seems like the ‘harsh truths’ – the severe hardships and tremendous difficulties – are being deliberately ignored, specifically the pressure of siblings to excel in effort to ease the pain of parents.

Being an identical twin to an autistic brother, I have grown up with my ‘other self’ hanging off me, depending on me for guidance and protection. In some ways this was dignifying, but mostly it was a huge burden, especially given the expectations of some of my fellow relatives. For example, my grandmother, who is very religious, often says to me that ‘when God gave your mother two little boys, one was meant to be special, and one was meant to protect them’. My parents have done their utmost to relieve me of such responsibilities, and I love them for that. They didn’t want me to be Sam’s caregiver. They wanted me to have my own life, my own friends, and my own ambitions. And even though to this day I still sometimes feel like the ‘caregiver’, I can honestly say that my life no longer revolves around my ‘other self’.

Kate Strohm demonstrates an accurate, but more importantly, an intimate understanding of the sibling experience that can only be shared by another sibling.

Above all this, what I appreciated most about this book was that I felt like I wasn’t reading from the clinical perspective of a psychiatrist or other field professional. Kate Strohm demonstrates an accurate, but more importantly, an intimate understanding of the sibling experience that can only be shared by another sibling. There is something immensely reassuring in reading the stories of other individuals who have siblings with disabilities. Not only does it inform people like myself that we are not alone, but it also helps us to realise that all of the reoccurring emotions such as anger, embarrassment, guilt and grief are all perfectly natural, and need not be denied, bur rather shared and acknowledged.