Jayson goes for it!

Brayden Harrington

Book - 2023

"Eighth grader Jayson Linden has had a stutter his whole life. Though his fellow classmates can sometimes be mean, Jayson tries not to let it get to him; he enjoys playing basketball and spending time with his friends. Then Jayson's best friend, Gloria, is kicked off the debate team because of her stutter and Jayson starts to notice other injustices happening at their school. In order to make their middle school a more inclusive place and to stand up for his friends, Jayson decides to run against Mack, the most popular boy at school and captain of the basketball team, for student-body president. But as the campaign heats up, will Jayson be able to face his fears of public speaking and win the election?" --

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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Genres
School fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Brayden Harrington (author)
Other Authors
David Ritz (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
211 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780063098930
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Stutter notwithstanding, eighth grader Jayson Linden runs for class president against the coolest kid in middle school. Teen author Harrington (who shared his own story in the 2021 picture book Brayden Speaks Up) stirs strategies and grievances alike into his debut novel, co-authored with Ritz. Jayson, who, like Harrington, speaks with a stutter, is pitted not only against rival candidate Mack--basketball star, local mayor's son, and all-around A-lister--but also insensitive teachers, a hostile principal, and a wrongheaded speech therapist. Initially motivated to run by indignation at seeing Mack insist that champion arguer Gloria Lopez be barred from debate club speaking due to her stutter and best friend Chuck Neville arbitrarily rejected at basketball tryouts for clashing with Mack, Jayson goes on to run an inclusive students' rights--based campaign against his opponent's smooth promotions of school spirit and a refurbished gym. Fortunately, he has peer allies as well as a new therapist more attuned to his needs than the old one to help him get past his profound lack of confidence, a disastrous public speaking performance, and the interference of his plainly partisan principal on the way to a triumphant, feel-good close. If the story overall seems predictable, there is at least one unexpected twist in a significant character's arc. Except for Chuck, who is Black, and Gloria, whose name cues her as Latine, the cast reads White. Weighted by heavy messaging but buoyant enough to stay afloat. (letter from Brayden) (Fiction. 10-13) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.