Lawless spaces

Corey Ann Haydu

Book - 2022

While a highly publicized sexual assault case threatens to destroy her and her mother, sixteen-year-old Mimi Dovewick tries to understand their tense relationship by reaching out to the women of her maternal line through the journals they all kept.

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Haydu Corey
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Subjects
Genres
Novels in verse
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Corey Ann Haydu (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
478 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 14 up.
Grades 10-12.
ISBN
9781534437067
9781534437074
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

People think they know Mimi Dovewick, social media star and daughter of former actress Tiffany Dovewick, both of them blonde, beautiful, and happy. What they don't see is the truth underneath Mimi's carefully curated online life. In fact, she and her mom aren't close, and Mimi feels lost, confused, and alone. But for generations, the Dovewick women have had a tradition of writing journals when they turn 16, and now it's Mimi's turn. As she learns for the first time about her mother's accusation of abuse against a former director, Mimi turns to the journals to find answers about herself, her mom, and her family's history, and she begins uncovering family secrets: generations of sexism and tense mother-daughter relationships, as well as many strong, determined women. Haydu's novel in verse is raw and unflinching, asking readers to consider what connects us to our pasts, whether or not our paths are already determined, and who controls the narrative. Powerful, absorbing, and beautiful, this feminist novel begs to be read and talked about.

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

Haydu's (Ever Cursed) powerfully told verse novel centers toxic familial legacies and women's experiences with stereotyping and the male gaze via the lens of a single family's tradition. On her 16th birthday, presumed-white social media influencer Mimi Dovewick's mother gives her a blank notebook, instructing her to fill it as generations of Dovewicks have done before. The same day, Mimi's mother disappears, having made accusations of sexual assault against a Hollywood director she knew when she was a 16-year-old aspiring actor. Alone, struggling with a memory of her own, and with only the journals of past Dovewick women to guide her, Mimi begins to unravel the experiences that have contributed to the creation of her own curated online persona. Through journal entries penned in 1924, 1954, 1971, and 1999, Mimi's matrilineal ancestors, who share the teen's short stature, curves, and blond hair, recount things otherwise left unsaid, including mistreatment by men and complicated relationships with their mothers. Haydu's adept use of verse and structure add a sense of intimacy to the contemporarily resonant narrative, vividly conjuring the story and the women at its heart. Ages 14--up. Agent: Victoria Marini, Irene Goodman Literary. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

When Mimi turns sixteen, her mother, Tiffany, delivers a family inheritance: notebooks filled with poetry penned by their female ancestors and a blank one in which to write her own. Mimi -- a guarded loner whose DIY fashions made her internet famous -- is skeptical of anything Tiffany has to offer. Their formerly tight relationship is now strained, with contention over Mimi's social media activity and Tiffany's sketchy boyfriend. After Tiffany publicly accuses a respected male celebrity of sexual misconduct, a bewildered and angry Mimi turns to her family's written history and uncovers a difficult legacy of women suffering under male expectations, harassment, and even assault. Mimi's raw, unstructured free-verse poems are intimately narrated, drawing readers close to her messy, competing emotions as she processes both Tiffany's revelation and her own unsettling experiences with men, online and in person. Poems from her ancestors' notebooks are told in a too-similar voice but are nonetheless riveting historical snapshots tracing a painful lineage of silence. When mother and daughter eventually stand up for each other, their moving reunification is encouraging. Among a growing selection of novels that approach #MeToo themes from a teen perspective (see also Charles's Muted, rev. 3/21, and Caletti's One Great Lie, rev. 9/21), this one stands out for its complex, thought-provoking depiction of intergenerational trauma. Jessica Tackett MacDonald March/April 2022 p.(c) Copyright 2022. 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

A girl searches for authenticity in a world that constantly judges her. The women in the Dovewick family have a few things in common. Short and buxom with cascading blond hair, they have the kinds of bodies other people feel free to project their assumptions onto. Starting on their 16th birthdays, each woman also keeps a journal in which they write poems about things not said aloud. Mimi has plenty to write about since she doesn't have many authentic connections in real life--she and her mother don't connect like they used to, and Mimi's many followers on social media only know the curated version she shares there. As Mimi reads the older generations' journals, she encounters women she never really knew, whether it's a different side of someone familiar, as with her mother, or untold stories, such as learning that in 1954 her great-grandmother was pressured into sex and then ditched by a manipulative boyfriend despite her unplanned pregnancy. Meanwhile, Mimi's mom publicly accuses a famous director of sexual assault, and the first Mimi hears about it is from the news. The verse journal excerpts making up this narrative powerfully convey generations of sexism surrounding women in many areas of their lives and ask whether that history is an emotional connection or a curse that is doomed to be repeated. By turns fragile, tough as nails, halting, and determined, these characters' voices command attention. The cast defaults to White. A compelling feminist story. (author's note) (Verse novel. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.