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320 pp.
| Scholastic |
July, 2023 |
TradeISBN 9781338736267$19.99
(2)
YA
Eighteen-year-old Alberto lives with his sister, Lupe, and her baby, Chato, in Brooklyn. While studying for his high-school equivalency, he's working painting houses for Lupe's sketchy boyfriend and expressing himself creatively at the neighborhood ceramics studio. On a job, he meets Grace, whose parents are going through a messy divorce. The two quickly bond and form a friendship, maybe more; but Alberto is troubled by a voice in his head (which he calls "Captain America") that espouses violence. Then a wealthy woman is murdered while Alberto is painting her apartment, and he becomes the only suspect. Grace harbors him, believes in him, and wants to clear his name--but he's not so sure he's innocent. Stork's (Illegal, rev. 7/20) latest propulsive psychological thriller again features a multidimensional cast of primary and secondary characters facing heightened situations (suspension of disbelief recommended). Issues of socioeconomic inequities, immigration, domestic violence, addiction, and antisemitism are well-threaded throughout the narrative; but most memorable and indelible is Alberto's struggle with mental illness: his efforts to stand up to Captain America, his uncertainty, and, by the end, comfort in being "not alone." A closing note describes Stork's own experiences with auditory hallucinations, and Mental Health and Crisis Resources are appended.