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Average rating3
A search for belonging in Sydney's Eastern Suburbs turns into a riotous satire of identity politics in this wildly irreverent coming-of-age story.
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This book is written from the perspective of a young narrator who is, rightfully, immature and chaotic. The author executed on that tone of voice well and so I was... frustrated by the character. I think this was intentional, and the book reached enough depth by the end for me to have some thoughtful takeaways. However, overall I didn't thoroughly enjoying reading it for the most part (mainly the first half). I plan on picking up the author's next book, though.