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Got this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review
The Art of Escaping by Erin Callahan is a feel-good book that will not let you down.
It has amazing characters in it. With background stories. The mean girls have depth, the depressed video gaming brother and his friends do aswell. There is so many to say about the characters, but I don't want to be the one that spoils the book. :)
And let's not forget the amazing Mattie. She reinvents herself while every muscle in her body is yelling to her to give up.
I also love love love the friendships in this book.
Erin has written in a style that feels realistic. I especially felt this while reading the escape scenes.
She has written it in a fast paced style, which I can really appreciate.
I can highly recommend this book to everyone that would like to read a feel-good book! I promise it won't let you down.
(You can also find this review on my blog.)
cw: statutory rape, ableism, homophobic slurs, alcoholism, depression
Spoiler-free Review of an eARC Provided by the Publisher via NetGalley
This ended up being a relatively cute contemporary read that I worked my way through pretty quickly. The writing was good, the plot itself was very original, and the characters were well-developed. I enjoyed it, but I didn't love it, and I think that's because I didn't feel invested enough in the story itself. At no point did I feel any concern that things wouldn't turn out okay.
Maybe I'm just too distanced from high school now, but Mattie's problems just... didn't feel like real problems to me. She's training to be an escapologist – a death-defying badass – but she's terrified that people will find out and post something mean about her on LifeScape (this world's version of Facebook). I feel like a story that focused more around her struggling through the training itself and less around her fears of exposure would have been more compelling for me.
There were actually more things (Mattie's training aside) that didn't feel fully fleshed out to me. Near the beginning, Mattie randomly has a nightmare about... LifeScape. This struck me as bizarre, but what struck me as more bizarre was that these (allegedly regular) nightmares didn't come up again. Sure, her fear of being ridiculed on LifeScape came up a few more times, but it seemed more like an afterthought than anything else. I'm hoping this ends up more fully developed or pulled altogether from the finished copy.
The implication that Mattie's secret double life and Will's sexuality were on a similar level of potential life-destruction also made me uncomfortable. This is touched upon, but placing them side-by-side and making Mattie's problems the main focus really felt to me like it was inadvertently minimizing the very real issue of coming out. I don't think this was intentional by the author at all, but that was still the impact that I personally felt.
It also really caught me off guard and really upset me that Mattie is constantly disgusted by her brother's inability to do anything when the narrative makes it clear that he is depressed and an alcoholic. To be fair, the author did note that the final copy clears up some ableist language, but I'm not sure how thoroughly this part of the plot was changed – the implication is that Mattie thinks she can inspire her brother to pull himself together, or something? When it seems like he really needs help and everyone is just... letting him languish.
Besides that, there were a few other things that made me cringe. Mattie sleeps with her older brother's drunken friend – but she was 16 or 17 at the time, and he was in his mid-twenties. She also has hella “not like other girl” vibes. I think it's fine to be different and quirky, but this treads dangerously on “I'm better than other girls because I do alternative things” territory. There are a couple other things, but mentioning them would be spoilers and I'm going to avoid that for now.
Overall, it was a fun, enjoyable read, but I worry about some of the content and hope things were cleaned up for the final copy.