Jagged little pill The novel

Eric Smith

Book - 2022

Told from multiple points of view, the lives of Frankie, Jo, Phoenix, Nick, and Bella are changed forever after one of them is sexually assulted at a party--and it looks like the perpetrator might get away with it.

Saved in:
Subjects
Genres
Novelizations
Psychological fiction
Novels
Young adult fiction
Published
New York : Amulet Books 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Eric Smith (author)
Other Authors
Alanis Morissette (author), Diablo Cody, Glen Ballard
Item Description
"Based on the Tony and Grammy award-winning musical"--Cover.
Physical Description
291 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 14 and up.
ISBN
9781419757983
9781419757990
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Five teens navigate the aftermath of sexual violence in this raw novelization of the musical Jagged Little Pill. The adoptive daughter of a white family in suburban Connecticut, Black 16-year-old Frankie feels that "I don't belong here, in this family." Her white older brother, Harvard-bound Nick, is desperate to please their parents. Transfer student Phoenix, who is Latinx, is struggling to balance his growing feelings for Frankie with caring for his hospitalized older sister. Frankie's best friend with benefits, queer white Jo, craves her homophobic mother's acceptance while also nursing feelings for Frankie. And white Bella simply wants to enjoy the end of high school before escaping to college. The teens' lives untether following an act of sexual violence, and they must come together to pick up the pieces. Though the intertwining story lines cause the jam-packed narrative to feel unbalanced, the five narrators' voices are distinct, providing a multilayered perspective. The teens explore gender and sexual identity, substance dependency, and complicated relationships in this edgy interpretation of the sometimes traumatizing experience of growing up. Morissette's lyrics, woven throughout, resonate powerfully with the group's turbulent adolescence. Ages 14--up. Agent (for Smith): Jen Azantian, Azantian Literary. (Apr.)

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

A novelization of the award-winning musical inspired by Morissette's acclaimed 1995 album. In alternating first-person chapters voiced by teenage Frankie and her brother, Nick, as well as several of their classmates, characters grapple with a host of social issues including addiction, transracial adoption (Frankie is a Black girl in a White family), sexual violence, and gender expression, all set against the backdrop of stifling suburban life. Morissette's song lyrics are broken up and woven into the story, showing up as poetry penned by Frankie and as exposition and dialogue. Unfortunately, the story is otherwise weighed down by clunky delivery of backstory and reliance on heavy-handed internal monologues. Many passages read as contrived and are not reflective of authentic teen voices. There's also a lot of intense emotion--fitting, given the intensity of the Jagged Little Pill album. But here it feels forced and out of place, for example, when it is expressed between characters who have just met and whom readers barely know as well. In one instance, Frankie suggests that her poems scare her racist White classmates, but the poem in question is composed of the lyrics to Morissette's "Ironic," which have nothing to do with race. Here and elsewhere in the novel, more strategically placed backstory might have provided context for the characters' reactions. Moments of smart humor unfortunately aren't enough to offset these narrative problems. This wannabe-edgy drama falters into melodrama. (Fiction. 14-adult) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.