Lark & Kasim start a revolution

Kacen Callender

Book - 2022

Seventeen-year-old nurodivergent and nonbinary Lark pretends that they are the creator of a viral thread that their ex-best friend, Kasim, accidentally posted onto their Twitter account, declaring his unrequited love, but living a lie takes its toll on Lark, forcing them to deal with their own messy emotions.

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Subjects
Genres
Transgender fiction
Romance fiction
Published
New York : Amulet Books 2022
Language
English
Main Author
Kacen Callender (author)
Other Authors
Sabrena Khadija (illustrator)
Physical Description
326 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781419756870
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Fans of Callender's Felix Ever After (2020) will find a lot to love in this introspective story about friendship, social media, self-love, and accountability. Lark is a nonbinary aspiring writer, which is why they feel the need to keep up with their Twitter presence, even when it goes awry. After their former best friend Kasim accidentally posts a thread to Lark's Twitter account about his unrequited and anonymous love, Lark gains an immense following, along with questions, criticism, and bullying. Kasim doesn't want anyone to know it was he who posted it, so Lark keeps it a secret. The Twitter thread spreads, pressing Lark to be dishonest to the world and everyone they love. Are the growing lies worth the renewed closeness they feel with Kasim? The protagonist in Lark's work-in-progress, Birdie, is a very present character in the novel, offering feedback and advice to Lark as they navigate their feelings and their own self-diagnosed neurodivergent mind. Callender carefully and compassionately addresses topics like rejection, activism, racism, transphobia, polyamory, mental health, and navigating the publishing industry as a marginalized person. This is a strongly character-driven novel that will certainly make readers root for Lark, Kasim, and their community and chosen family. It might even make them want to start revolutions of their own.

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

Callender (Moonflower) explores themes such as accountability, honesty, and self-love in this West Philly--set novel that follows a queer Black teen searching for a place to belong. Persistent online bullying causes nonbinary Lark Winters, who's 17 and self-diagnosed as neurodivergent, to feel self-conscious and lonely. Nevertheless, they believe that an active Twitter presence is the only way they'll get to publish their in-progress novel about a winged teen named Birdie. When Lark's former best friend, Black trans 17-year-old Kasim, mistakenly posts--from Lark's Twitter account--a thread about Kasim's secret crush, the tweets go viral. Lark agrees to say they wrote the thread to protect Kasim's "hardcore" image after they realize the tweets are increasing their platform, but the more popular the thread becomes, the more lies Lark must tell, and the more they stand to lose. Lark's fictional protagonist, Birdie, is a constant companion, offering advice and solace as events unfold. Callender proffers complex perspectives on activism, bullying, respectability politics, and polyamory, among other timely topics via a queer, socially conscious cast. Lark's experiences are emotionally fraught but not overwrought, emblematic of a deeply kind soul who is growing and learning from every triumph and mistake. Ages 14--up. Agent: Beth Phelan, Gallt & Zacker Literary. (Sept.)

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

Seventeen-year-old Lark is sure that once they hit fifty thousand Twitter followers, an agent will pick up their novel, and they'll finally be able to prove they're "worthy of being loved." Lark -- who lives in West Philly and is Black, nonbinary, polyamorous, and neurodivergent -- takes summer writing classes with other Black, queer teens, including their ex-best friend Kasim. Lark and Kasim butt heads because Lark believes in unconditional love and forgiveness, while revolutionary Kasim would rather "burn down" everything wrong with society. But when Kasim accidentally posts about his own unrequited love from Lark's Twitter account, the thread goes viral, and Lark takes credit. As Lark lies for internet fame, they can't help but wonder: who is Kasim really in love with? And does Lark even love themself? The Twitter posts re-created throughout are sometimes hilarious, sometimes unsettlingly real, exploring internet callout culture and what it truly takes to grow from one's mistakes. The novel can be didactic at times, but the characters and their relationships are complex, engaging, and delightfully flawed. References to the COVID-19 pandemic are seamlessly interwoven into everyday life; frank discussions of topics like autism and ADHD in the Black community, and how to navigate polyamorous relationships, feel fresh and necessary in the YA sphere. A brief writing guide for aspiring teen authors is appended. Bodie Shanis September/October 2022 p.81(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.