Heretics Anonymous

Katie Henry

Book - 2018

When nonbeliever Michael transfers to a Catholic school in eleventh grade, he quickly connects with a secret support group intent on exposing the school's hypocrisies one stunt at a time.

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Katherine Tegen Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Katie Henry (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
329 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780062698872
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Michael is not happy about spending his junior year attending a Catholic high school, but his father's job entails moving around, and it is the best school in the area. Who, he wonders, is going to be friends with an atheist? But he finds a group, collectively known as Heretics Anonymous, who hang out in a hidden room of the school basement to discuss their dissatisfaction with St. Clare's. Avi is Jewish, and gay Max is eccentric; Eden practices paganism; and Lucy well, Lucy, a rebellious Catholic, is just wonderful. In her debut, Henry takes on a lot: a strained father-son relationship, a first romance between Michael and Lucy that's more tentative than torrid, and a group dynamic that propels the Heretics to take action rather than just gripe. The balls stay in the air quite well, and while a few of the characters, like Max, are never quite developed (or, in the case of super-Catholic Teresa, stereotypical), adults and teens alike get their due. What is most impressive here, however, is Henry's multifaceted take on religion. Michael isn't searching; he knows how he feels. Yet his introduction to others who feel differently in the case of Lucy, passionately differently opens him up. Come for the arch first-person narrative and puppy love, stay for the examination into belief.--Cooper, Ilene Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this entertaining coming-of-age story, five free-thinking students launch a clandestine campaign against their school's rigid policies and practices, with unanticipated consequences. When his father's job necessitates yet another move to a new town, Michael, a devout atheist who anticipates being miserable at his Catholic high school, finds himself unexpectedly invited into a "study group" of self-proclaimed heretics. Lucy wants to be a priest, Eden practices "Celtic Reconstructionist Polytheism," Avi is Jewish and gay, and Max is Unitarian Universalist. Through creative, anonymous measures, they contest the sex education curriculum, the dress code, and the dismissal of a lesbian teacher for marrying her long-term partner. The school authorities and some students attempt to discover the subversives and restore discipline, while a developing romance between Michael and Lucy challenges both students to respect the other's beliefs. When Michael commits an act that threatens his newfound friendships, he undergoes a spiritual awakening of sorts, which the author pulls off without sentimentality. None of Henry's multi-dimensional, multi-ethnic characters fall into stereotypes, and her snappy dialogue sparkles throughout this skillfully crafted debut. Ages 13-up. Agent: Sarah LaPolla, Bradford Literary Agency. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 9 Up-St. Clare's is a home of plaid ties, blazers, and strict Catholic doctrine. When Michael is forced to move again and starts school at St. Clare's, he wonders how he will get by as a confirmed atheist. He is positive that he will have no friends and that absolutely no one in this straitlaced world will understand him. That is, until he meets the member of Heretics Anonymous. Lucy is a true believer and feminist, Avi is Jewish and gay, Max is an original who loves to sport a great cloak, and Eden is the paganist of the group. The heretics spend most of their time being sounding boards for one another, until Michael convinces them that complaining doesn't create change. One stunt at a time brings out issues great and small through the halls of St. Clare's. But will Michael take things too far and put his friendships and all of their futures at risk? A real and honest portrayal of teen socialization leads to an opportunity to discuss and drive activism among teen readers. The characters are by no means perfect. Each one struggles with family and personal issues which are reflected in their interactions with one another and other characters. The story adeptly asks readers to question what they believe and why, without being preachy, judgmental, or dismissive. Humor interlaced with more serious ideas make for an interesting and enjoyable read. VERDICT Highly recommended, especially for teens who are passionate about a cause.-Elizabeth Speer, Weatherford College, TX © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

Atheist teen Michaels familys latest move has landed him at the Catholic, conservative St. Clares Preparatory School (its the areas best private school, so some non-Catholics attend). Michael assumes the school will be full of mindless Catholic sheep but finds himself welcomed into Heretics Anonymous, a secret support group for students whose beliefs dont match up with the schools doctrine. Members include gay, Jewish Avi; self-described pagan Eden; Max, who chafes at the schools dress code; and devoutly Catholic, feminist Lucy, who wants to be a priest. The group begins taking subversive action at Michaels encouragement, starting with an annotated for accuracy sex-ed video; eventually, Michael himself goes too far. In addition to being a frequently hilarious comedy with its share of complicated romance (see: Lucy), the story presents a thought-provoking look at faith, questioning but ultimately respectful of Catholicism and other beliefs, Michaels atheism included: he grows to understand why religion is important to others, but remains true to himself. shoshana flax (c) Copyright 2018. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Teen angst and religious reflection cross paths in this insightful tale of self-discovery.This engrossing bildungsroman centers on the travails of white, first-person narrator Michael Ausman. Reeling from his family's frequent moves, and now forced to change schools less than two months into 11th grade, Michael is resentful at being at the mercy of his father's job and worrying about how he, an atheist, will fit in at St. Clare's, the best privateand Catholicschool in town. Luckily, Michael soon falls in with others bucking the St. Clare's norm: Lucy, a devout Colombian-American Catholic bent on reforming the church; Avi, a gay, semi-observant Jew; Eden, a Celtic Reconstructionist Polytheist with Irish heritage; and Max, a Korean-American Unitarian. Together this group of iconoclasts forms "Heretics Anonymous," a deliciously secret society united in the belief, "That all people, regardless of what they worship, who they love, and what they think / Have a right to exist, and a right to be heard." The hypocrisy-busting acts of rebellion the group engages in range from hilariously annotating the school's sex-ed DVD to circulating an alternative school paper challenging the dress code and exposing the firing of a popular teacher. But when Michael goes rogue and acts alone, his entire world is threatened. With a page-ripping plot and realistic character development, Henry's funny, heartwarming tale of unlikely rebels soars: an auspicious debut. (Fiction. 13-adult) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.