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YA
When Skye was six years old, her parents, both physicists, divorced. She and her brother, Finn, spent alternate weekends with their dad, but he became increasingly obsessed with physics and would forget to feed and interact with the kids, leaving them to fend for themselves. When the book opens, Skye (now twelve), her mother, and her mother's kind boyfriend are celebrating Finn's "MIA birthday," because Finn was kidnapped by their father and has been missing for four years. Miraculously, he is found soon after and returns home: "And then he's there. A tall Black boy with short, tiny dreads, fat headphones looped around his neck. Finn. My brother. My Finn." Skye is excited that her brother is back, but she realizes that the boy who has returned is a different person. This Finn is "so sad and lost, like he carries so much pain inside"; rather than accept the fact that her brother has changed, Skye believes that he is an imposter, whom she calls "Not-Finn." Skye must come to terms with some tough and tangled truths, including admitting to herself that she feels rejected because her father didn't kidnap her. This engaging coming-of-age story gives voice to complicated and traumatic feelings caused by divorce and estrangement, to changes in family and friendships, and to the difficulty of accepting the inevitability of change.
Reviewer: Julie Hakim Azzam
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
January, 2025