Review by Kirkus Book Review
A Korean American teen recounts the events leading up to the shooting of her brother. A newspaper reports that a high school student shot a mentally ill man in self-defense; the victim is Leo, Georgia Kim's beloved older brother. But as Georgia's flashback narrative reveals, there's more to the story…and to Leo, whose developmental disability causes seizures, minimal speech, and violent meltdowns. To meet Leo's educational needs, the Kims have moved from a diverse city to the suburb of Sunnyvale, California. Georgia, already self-conscious about being fat, is thrust into heavily White Cambridge Academy. Additionally, Georgia struggles to reconcile her devotion to Leo's care with her radiologist father's high academic expectations, her mother's desire that Georgia live her own life, and her own college dreams. Soon, however, Georgia befriends a group comprising Korean Americans and Cambridge's sole Black student--and falls for two different guys. Her new friends even welcome Leo to hagwon, their Korean study hangout. But everything shatters when a somewhat two-dimensionally villainous classmate misunderstands Leo's behavior. Georgia's efforts to respect Leo's thoughts and feelings are heartening. Because her identity is inextricably entwined with being his sister and protector, her character arc is also closely tied to Leo. This contemporary take on Of Mice and Men tackles numerous heavy issues, including racism, ableism, gun control, and the challenges of caring for a significantly disabled family member, but offers no easy answers. Devastating. (Fiction. 13-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.